Yes, its Lisa Kron’s piece, but it belongs to Shana Wride
now. Kron’s “2.5 Minute Ride” currently in an extraordinary solo performance by
Shana Wride is the stream of conscious love letter to her Dad as she looks
back on his past, his loves, his childhood ties, family, parents and her
relationship to it all.
Hat’s off to Diversionary Theatre for bringing this
emotionally charged, funny and heart-rending tale to San Diego audiences. Kron’s
piece is a perfect selection for the Park Ave. location. It addresses all the
issues that have become a Beacon for Diversionary. Fine assists come from Sean
Fanning (scenic designer), Kate Bishop (Costume), Curtis Mueller (lighting),
Bonnie Durben (properties) and Melanie
Chen (sound).
Shana Wride in "2.5Minute Ride" |
Kron’s 80 or so minute autobiographical narrative played at
the La Jolla Playhouse in 1996. She performed the piece back then I remember her
skills as a storyteller. But that was long ago and now we have a very different
take with Wride’s retelling.
With direction by Rosina Reynolds (herself the recipient of
the Craig Noel Award for Best Solo Performance in her portrayal of Golda Meir
in “Golda’s Balcony) Wride’s perfect performance of Kron’s story is filled with
layers of love, surprise and dedication. I can think of no better messenger
than Wride’s Bravura tour de force performance to bring home the goods.
Kron’s story takes us on two journeys where humor and horror are
juxtaposed on each other. Traveling on their own tracks and merging seamlessly
at certain intersections they offer tidbits about her mother, her brother and
some family idiosyncrasies that are funny and typical of most Jewish family
mishegashes. Added to the obvious, the stories are poignant almost to teary. It
is an experience of a lifetime watching and living vicariously through her eyes.
One is her trip to the Cedar Point Amusement Park in
Sandusky, Ohio where every year by ritual, her family heads out for three days,
in three separate vehicles. One day is the travel day, one day is spent
sampling the food and where she ultimately rides the mean streak rollercoaster,
The Mantis, a new standup rollercoaster, with her near blind, diabetic
father.
The other is a trip she took with her father to Poland and
Germany to revisit his birthplace, to see where her grandparents lived, grew up
and later a visit to their final resting place in Auschwitz.
Taken on school trip to Auschwitz by Eytan Argavani |
From her Midwestern Jewish background, to her partner of
choice, to her brother’s Orthodox wedding (side splitting funny bit about the
wedding plans and Lisa and her partner at the time, to be bridesmates) to the
Germany trip, to her fathers job as a G.I. (he had to get himself declassified
as an illegal alien), whose job it was to interrogate captured Nazi’s, Wride tells
it as if it belongs to her.
“I felt I had made a
profound connection with him on this trip” …and that “up until this time
everything in my life was a shadow. “The only true emotional reality was what
happened to my father and his family 50 years ago”.
“I have a checklist in my head; things I have to do before my
father dies. Number one: Look him in the eye and tell him that I love him.
“Wow! That hit home!
Sitting through Kron’s story I couldn’t help but think back
on the OH! So many Holocaust memorials I visited in my lifetime. From
Washington, D.C. to Yad Vashem to Boston to Amsterdam and a memorable trip to
Ellis Island where the stacks of hats, luggage, glasses, shoes and clothing
brought collective gasps from those in my group.
And of the course the pictures sent back to me from my two older
grandchildren, who while living in Israel took a school trip to Poland and
Auschwitz. The tracks, the barbed wire fences the sign above the entrance to
the camp Arbeit Macht Frei. She left nothing out.
“ My father is a small man contained and neat. He smells like
lavender.”
“When I was in college I was taught that if you are standing
near a piece of furniture on stage you should put your hand on it because that
will make you look bigger. See? See how that works? I’m putting my hand on my
father’s life.”
See you at the theatre.
Dates: Through March 19th
Organization: Diversionary Theatre
Phone: 619.220.0097
Production Type: Solo/Tour de Force
Where: 4545 Park Blvd. University Heights, 92116
Ticket Prices: Start at $15.00
Web: diversionary.org
Photo: Daren Scott
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