Start with a topic you’re familiar with, most will say when
giving advice to an up and coming possible next Pulitzer Prize Winning
playwright.
San Diego native Karen Hartman began writing plays when she
was fifteen and a student at La Jolla High School. The Playwrights Project
founded by Deborah Salzar was the vehicle Hartman used to scoot her along to
bigger and better things with her natural gift for writing.
Two time recipient of the Edgerton New Play Prize, and Senior
Artist-in -Residence at the UW School of Drama, Hartman’s gut wrenching and emotionally
gripping play “Roz & Ray” is now being staged in the Lyceum Space of the
San Diego Repertory Theatre through Oct. 1st.
Under the deft direction of Delicia Turner- Sonnenberg and
with two noticeably opposing antagonists, both physically and emotionally, the
story unfolds to an almost unbelievable yet almost predictable conclusion… with
a few eye-popping twists.
Steven Lone and Carla Harting |
With health insurance in the headlines these days it’s
fitting that a play zeroing in on health care crisis, hospital protocol,
insurance companies and independent labs creating formulas that we all depend on
are the many topics of discussion in Hartman’s heartbreaking play.
Physician Roz and her patients, twins Mikey and Ray, Bug Ray
son’s are discussing the advantages of the new magic medicine they will be
needing to help their blood to clot when and if they fall or hurt themselves as
the pay opens. Ray Leon is all over himself praising Roz for the special
attention she is paying to his boys,
The twins were born with a rare bleeding disorder and as
hemophiliac’s they need blood transfusions several time a week that in the past
kept them hospitalized for several days at a time. This new magic medicine,
Factor V11I, requires one injection, done at home, easy! It’s 1976. “We’re done
with the dark ages.”
Set (John Icovelli) in the simple office of Dr. Roz stands a
metal table acting as a desk, a phone, a few chairs and 3 sliding or push doors
leading to back rooms, a reception area and or an exit, a mobile of blood in
transfusion bags hangs above and in the corner is a first aid kit with the next
home batch of Factor III. The dates are projected (Sherrice Mojgani also
credited for lighting) on the walls in bold
as the years pass in time from 1976 to 1987.
The scenes move back and forth in time with Ray and Roz
discussing the progress made in the medical field to the findings made that
some of the Factor III might be tainted with the HIV virus and how that will or
maybe has already affected the health of Little Ray and Mikey.
“They might have been injected with a ‘blood borne plague’.
Not once. Not twice. But up to three times a week. For their entire childhood.”
At some point the relationship between Roz and Ray a romantic
connection and liaison grows, something she fights (not hard enough) and he
pushes. He’s divorced and still angry with his ex, Evelyn.
In between their secret meetings, (in her office or her
apartment to which she gave him a key, her home phone number) the conversation
develops into a lesson on how for profit pharmaceutical companies ‘market’
their product in hospitals plugging away at their magical drugs.
She knows he has sex with men. “Are you gay”. “Did I just seem gay?” He denies it. She
insists he use protection all the time.
She saw the study. She kept it from him. She approached the
hospital. Do nothing. Everyone was making bucks off of Factor 8, including
Children’s Hospital. She’s a
hematologist oncologist not an epidemiologist.
How they test, positive and or negative never really reach
the patients ears until its too late. But the journal reported two deaths in
eight cases; from a medical standpoint it’s insignificant. Does she go with her
hunch that the Factor is tainted and discuss it with others in her field, or
does she stick with hospital protocol and let the cards fall where they may?
Carla Harting |
Both actors embody the characters and wear them perfectly.
Lone is virile and strong and convincing. Harting is dwarfed in size next to
him, older and better versed and noticeably falling hard.
The emotional ups and downs, the suffering and grief, the stress and lovemaking; the all out frustration resonates through the 90 or so minutes that it takes to move from optimism, friendship and lovers to sheer despair and near suicide is more than imaginable in this timely play.
Aids was the plague of the 80’s and the plays “Normal Heart”
by Larry Kramer details it chapter and verse. This play came about through some
family digging on Hartman’s part.
In 1992 an article appeared in The San Diego Reader naming
Hartman’s father as one of the doctors ‘central to the issue facing the issue
to hemophiliacs at the time.
Thousands upon thousands of hemophiliacs died as a result of
tainted HIV blood. At the time President Reagan refused to take any action on
the epidemic/crisis. Gay men became the targets of hostility, shame and right
wing religious bigots.
Not much as changed in their religious hypocrisy but
thankfully so may were and are able to get the medical help they need.
Bravo to Harting, Lone and director Delicia Turner-Sonnenberg
(who makes everything look easy and yet profound) and Karen Hartman for
bringing an important issue to the fore and making it understandable to
civilians not connected to the medical profession.
There’s not much time to catch this one, but I urge that you
do.
See you at the theatre.
Dates: Through Oct. 1st
Organization: San Diego Repertory Theatre
Phone: 619.544.1000
Production Type: Drama
Where: 79 Horton Plaza Downtown San Diego, 92101
Ticket Prices: Start at $33.00
Web: sdrep.org
Venue: Lyceum Space
Photo: Daren Scott
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