The Washington Post - 02.03.2020

(Tina Meador) #1

MONDAy, MARCH 2 , 2020. THE WASHINGTON POST eZ re C3


BY CELIA WREN

Triscuits help fuel the spiritu-
ality of marian, the flaky matri-
arch in “Easy Women Smoking
Loose Cigarettes.” At one point in
this tonally jolting play, now
receiving its world premiere
from Signature Theatre, the
character watches a video by a
goddess-movement shaman. It’s
night, and marian is seeking
calm in a household filled with
needy, and even desperate, loved
ones. “We are working to lean in
to our Shakti,” the video intones.
Watching raptly, marian con-
sumes wine, ice cream and Tris-
cuits by turns.
Would that this dramedy, by
local playwright Dani Stoller,
could multitask as fluently. A tale
of a family grappling with crises
and mistakes, “Easy Women” of-
fers some real poignancy, as well
as moments of delectable humor
scattered amid more obvious
yuks. Its narrative whirs along
with well-made-play efficiency,
reflecting creditably on Stoller,
better known as an actress. And
director Stevie Zimmerman’s


sold-out production showcases
terrific performances, such as
Susan rome’s d roll, vivid marian.
But “Easy Women” encom-
passes a story of sex addiction
and a broken marriage, and
Stoller and Zimmerman have
not succeeded in making this
dark material seem part of a
continuum with the frothier
content. When the play veers
between comedy and serious-
ness, the effect is jarring. more-
over, in an ill-conceived choice,
semi-humorousness infuses a
key scene involving a seduction
so aggressive, and so lopsided in
its power dynamic, that it is
almost an assault.
These flaws are not attribut-
able to the acting. The perform-
ers, all boasting first-rate dra-
matic and comic timing, have no
trouble switching styles. rome
works mostly in comic mode as
the fussy motormouth marian,
who at one point cajoles her
entire household, male and fe-
male, to participate in a ritual
exploration of the Sacred Yoni.
The story of marian’s sex-addict
daughter Lee lurches between hu-

mor and intensity, but that’s not
the fault of Shanara Gabrielle,
who excels at both and plausibly
tempers spikiness with vulnera-
bility. reeling from her problems,
Lee seeks refuge at mom’s, where
she encounters the pregnant Kitty
(an ebullient Jordan Slattery),
niece to marian’s husband rich-

ard (John Leslie Wolfe, amusingly
mellow). Also on hand is the
Princeton-bound Bobby (John
Austin, hilariously tightly wound),
who has fled his own family’s
troubles.
The supporting characters
contribute funny moments and
valuable warmth. After Kitty

complains that her baby bump
makes it hard to shave her legs,
Bobby helps out. She sits on a
table, with a lollipop in her
mouth, while he gently wields
the razor. (meghan raham de-
signed the florida-townhouse
set, and Debra Kim Sivigny the
personality-appropriate cos-
tumes.)
In a more startling swerve
away from comedy, Lee at one
point exclaims, “I don’t know
what to do with all of this pain.”
You often don’t perceive that
anguish, due to the punchline
aesthetic — Triscuit references
and all — that extends around
her.
[email protected]

easy women Smoking Loose
Cigarettes by Dani stoller. Directed
by stevie Zimmerman; lighting
design, andrew Cissna; sound,
Kenny neal; intimacy coordinator,
Casey Kaleba. 110 minutes. this
show is sold out; returned tickets
could create availability. through
March 29 at signature theatre,
4200 Campbell ave., arlington. 70 3-
820-9771. sigtheatre.org.

tHeAter reVIew


‘Easy Women’: First-rate acting but too many startling swerves


CHrIstopHer Mueller/sIgnature tHeatre
shanara Gabrielle, left, and susan Rome excel as mother-daughter
duo Lee and Marian in “easy women smoking Loose Cigarettes.”

center of gravity toward a female
vantage. There were flashes of wit
(Elvira entering with a train of
literal baggage was a nice touch).
But the overall strategy was lean,
eschewing grandeur, setting up
the singers to succeed and then
getting out of their way.
And the singing and acting
were, o n the whole, very g ood. As
Donna Anna, Vanessa Vasquez
deployed a crystalline or steely
bite as the situation demanded,
with finely drawn phrasing: re-
fined wrath. Keri Alkema’s Don-
na Elvira took longer to warm up,
but once there, put out rich
sound edged with satin, a slight
haze of fantasy. Vanessa Becerra
was a bright, pert Zerlina; some-
times, pushing out volume, her
intonation would drift sharp,
but, when centered, her singing
had an appealing effervescence.
Alek Shrader, as ottavio,
seemed to be in suboptimal v oice,
shifting from easiness to tight
effort i n higher range, backing off
his top notes. Norman Garrett’s
masetto had fine-grained, dy-
namic tone and restrained pow-
er. Peter Volpe was appropriately
stern and stentorian as the Com-
mendatore. And the opera’s main
odd couple was estimable. A s the
Don, ryan mcKinny unspooled
smooth, stylish sound, a forceful
snarl lurking beneath a suave
veneer. And Kyle Ketelsen was a
scene- and show-stealing Lep-
orello: a gleaming, dynamic bari-
tone, a dexterous command of
the language and some punctili-
ous comedic timing.
Timing was an issue for WNo
principal conductor Evan rogis-
ter; though the orchestra made
balanced, polished sound, coor-
dination between players and
singers was often approximate.
But the cleanly drawn, direct
sense of storytelling, more effi-
cient than opulent, compensat-
ed. Ketelsen’s comic skills, espe-
cially, often pushed the show’s
knife-edge balance of horror and
farce in the latter direction, but
lurking tension propelled the
show like a coiled spring.
Publicity and program notes
explicitly r eferenced #meToo and
related movements. (“He’s spent
his life betraying women,” the
posters read. “Now time’s up.”)
But it was damning enough in-
dictment that meeker didn’t
need to underline the parallels.
This production’s particular
strength was revealing the Don’s
unrepentant amorality as only
the most obvious pathology. ot-
tavio’s self-centered impatience,
masetto’s jealousy and Leporel-
lo’s cynicism also victimize the
women; nevertheless, as in reali-
ty, it remains women’s work to
navigate, mitigate, placate. That
the story feels true to human
nature testifies to mozart and
Lorenzo da Ponte’s incisiveness.
That a straightforward interpre-
tation is, in 2020, effortlessly
timely? T hat’s on us.
[email protected]

Washington national opera’s “Don
giovanni,” with a running time of
approximately three hours, will be
performed intermittently through
March 22 at the Kennedy Center’s
opera House.

wno from C1

Mozart gets


a #MeToo


moment


from WNO


something that’s already been
done a shout-out.
At the end of his show, metallic
confetti rained down on the cars.
It wasn’t clear why. But blizzards
of confetti have been part of the
finale at other designers’ runway
shows. Abloh is part of the rental
economy in which nothing is
owned and everything is shared.
Everything is borrowed. No one
has a stake in anything. Nothing
sticks.
Abloh is a designer for our
time. Until suddenly, he is not.
[email protected]

runway, which was essentially a
large sports arena lit by lurid red
lights and studded with the
sawed halves of cars standing
upright like industrial age Stone-
henge.
fashion is all about borrowing,
referencing and reinventing. But
really good fashion does so in a
way that improves upon a preex-
isting idea by tweaking it to make
it utterly, perfectly right for a new
time. Truly marvelous fashion
transforms something familiar
into a revelation. Abloh doesn’t
reveal something anew; he gives

at all in the course of more than
two decades.
Abloh likes big tulle ballgowns
juxtaposed with technical sports-
wear and street gear. So he offers
half a fussy party dress over cam-
ouflage trousers, or a cropped
windcoat over a giant wedge of
tulle. He likes Hadids, of which
there were three on the runway:
Gigi, Bella and mama Yolanda.
Sometimes, instead of spindly
heels, models wore off-White for
Nike sneakers with their dangling
references to anti-theft devices.
That was the coolest thing on a

and Nike and Arc’teryx — along
with references to the Dutch label
Viktor & rolf and its use of mas-
sive silhouettes and To m ford’s
version of Gucci. Indeed, Abloh
sent down a white knit dress with
Swiss cheese cutouts and a gold
belt that was a direct homage to
ford’s s linky white jersey evening
gown with strategic peeks of skin,
which was, itself, an homage to
the work of Halston. It was even
worn by the same model, Carolyn
murphy, who should really bottle
whatever she’s drinking because
she does not appear to have aged

to the “Project runway” cliche
about fortunes shifting in a day.
fashion isn’t fickle; fashion sim-
ply puts an inordinate amount of
stock in fables.
Abloh is an intellectual grazer.
He’s constantly snacking on in-
spiration, offbeat ideas, iconic
creative gestures from historic
brands. The fall-winter 2020-
202 1 collection he put on the
runway Thursday evening at
fashion Week was a mix of Abloh


fasHIon weeK from C1


Abloh’s new collection fails to stick the landing


Jonas gustaVsson/MCV pHoto for tHe WasHIngton post

Virgil abloh’s fall-winter 20 20-2021 collection featured big tulle ballgowns juxtaposed with technical sportswear and street gear — and it lacked the designer’s usual vision.


MUSIC-ORCHESTRAL

Free tickets will be
distributed
beginning at 5pm in
the States Gallery,
two per person

Free

The Kennedy CenterTe rrace
Theater
2700 FStreet NW
Washington, DC 20566
http://www.apolloorchestra.com

The Apollo Orchestra welcomes world-renowned pianist
Peter Orth in an evening of works by Beethoven and
Respighi.

Thursday,March5at
6:00pm

The Apollo
Orchestra
With Peter Orth, piano

DANCE

Tickets
available
at the
Box Office

Kennedy Center
Eisenhower Theater
kennedy-center.org
or call (202) 467-4600

DamianWoetzel, former NYC Ballet Principal dancer turned
director,choreographer,and producer—and now president
of The JuilliardSchool—continues to bring together today’s
most creative voices in dance and music. For thisDEMO
performance, artists Robert Fairchild, Lauren Lovette, Roman
Mejia, MelissaToogood, Dario Natarelli, Lil Buck, Jon Boogz,
Brooklyn Rider,and Alberta Khoury join forces in an exciting
program of new collaborations!

Tonight at 8

"DEMO" by
DamianWoetzel:
NOW 2020

Tickets
available
at the
Box Office

Kennedy Center
Te rrace Theater
kennedy-center.org
or call (202) 467-4600

Conceived and directed by internationallyrenowned
Japanese visual artistTabaimo in collaboration with award-
winning choreographer Maki Morishita, this whimsical,
mischievous multimedia work is performed byasolo female
dancer and two on-stage musicians to an original scoreby
YusukeAwazu and KeisukeTanaka.

Tomorrow at 7:30

"Fruits borne
out of rust" by
Ta baimo and
Maki Morishita

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