AISLE SAY New York

TRUE WEST

by Sam Shepard
Directed by James Macdonald
Starring Paul Dano and Ethan Hawke
a production of The Roundabout Theatre Company
at the American Airlines Theatre

Reviewed by David Spencer

2/4/2019
True West
is a dance between two wildly dysfunctional brothers who are purportedly adults. It takes place in the Hollywood home of the boys’ mother, who is vacationing and has left it in the keeping of Austin (Paul Dano), an aspiring screenwriter, who is getting precious little work done in the wake of a visit from redneck brother Lee (Ethan Hawke). (The play never quite explains how one brother can be an articulate urbanite while the other is a backwoods good ol’ boy, but the audience never sees fit to question it either). Austin’s life gets further turned around when he makes the perhaps totally unavoidable mistake of introducing Lee to Saul Kimmer (Gary Wilmes), the movie producer he’s been courting for months. A perpetually shifting balance of power, ebbing and flowing with ever escalating mind and macho games between the brothers, leads to a final confrontation that will be played out in front of their bewildered mother (Marylouie Burke), who returns to her devastated home early and finds herself ready to leave as quickly…

What’s on offer at the American Airlines Theatre (by way of the Roundabout Theatre Company) is entertaining enough if you factor in this much: It’s True West. Period. It is perhaps the pinnacle of Sam Shepard fare, but it is still less of a fully realized play than a great, and highly distinctive, excuse for two actors to wail—as artists and on each other. Nothing you do to the piece makes it transcend itself—especially as so much of it hinges on tame, dated stuff (wired telephones, tube TVs, a world before common household use of the VCR, manual typewriters and manuscript paper)—the best you can hope is that you tap successfully into its capacity for volatile thrill.

And in that regard director James Macdonald hasn’t done badly. This is a somewhat less ragged True West than NYC has seen before, which is perhaps inevitable, being the first on a Broadway proscenium in a large house, requiring somewhat neater definition of its characters and trajectory. Paul Dano (who I liked especially) as the writing brother goes all the way with the intellectual nerd trope, Ethan Hawke goes all the way with the beer-guzzling time-bomb trope, and that makes the collision as they cross paths toward opposite extremes for which they are manifestly unsuited all the more amusing.

That said, an unfortunate consequence of the play being 38 years old is that what seemed, in its time, like an elliptical, raw, anarchic style, encouraged by a rebellious era, has become kind of foursquarely clear and quaint; the structure of the play even comes off as a bit schematic—and I say this having seen the legendary off-Broadway production of ’82 (preserved for TV by PBS), with Malkovich and Sinise, plus the revival of 2000, and remembering both well, I’m not denying what it was once and what it still had a few visceral ties to after. And unlike the 2011 Broadway revival of Jason Miller’s 1972 play That Championship Season, a genre-renovating play for which I’ve been on the other side of the argument, nobody here has lost touch with Shepard’s sensibility. Paradoxically, the fiercely loving approach to True West makes its quaintness (geez, not a word you’d ever predict using toward Shepard’s work) even more exposed.

Proving, if anything, that some American classics are less classic than others…


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