Intrepid Theatre Company is currently mounting a beautifully
nuanced and compelling San Diego premiere and final main-stage production of “Father
Comes Home From The Wars” by Suzan-Lori Parks through Nov.5th at the Horton
Grand Theatre.
It’s a three parts or chapters or acts; ode to the lengthy
anguished and long ago battles that had their beginnings when blacks were
brought to this country and sold as slaves.
Today they are literally and painstakingly still fighting to
free themselves of the shackles that bound them to their masters then and now
to a society that strives to keep them in their place.
Neither Parks (“Top Dog/Under Dog”) nor the movers and
shakers of Intrepid Theatre Company are ones to back away from a controversial
topic, and while this subject is still a hot potato as negative symbols of
Southern Confederate idealism are being removed from universities, common
squares and major highways in certain parts of our country, the conversation
Parks offers begins in 1862.
Wrekless Watson |
Hero (Wrekless Watson) is the property of the Colonel (Tom
Stephenson), who is about to head off to war. He offers Hero a chance to come
with him and fight for the Confederacy and an opportunity to win his freedom.
“I was thinking I’d be on the wrong side.”
What would his going along with the Colonel look like to his
friends? According to the Leader (Leonard Patton), “Working as the boss-masters
servant”. Another, “That’s what Hero does here, so that’s what he’ll do when he
goes to the war. His job aint gonna change just cause he gets to wear a fancy
uniform.” And so they bet. Will he go or will he stay?
His best friend and soon to be adversary Homer (Cortez L.
Johnson, "Ballad of Emmitt Till"), whose foot was severed by Hero at an earlier time when the slave
tried to escape and Hero caught him, weaves itself trough the stories as their
friendship, or not becomes an issue later on.
Hero’s fellow slaves along with the Oldest Man (a wise and
convincing Antonio TJ Johnson), his surrogate father are taking up sides while
his old dog Odyssey (a charming dog like in a sheepskin collar and pilots hat,
Durwood Murray) has taken off and that’s not a good sign.
But to trust a white man who has never kept a promise before,
or to break a promise to his live in Penny (Tamara McMillian) that he will not
go and to leave without his faithful dog are but some of the questions asked in
Book I “The Measure of A Man”.
Parks sets her play in Early Spring, 1862, Far West Texas.
Hero’s journey/odyssey in this the first of three (and according to the
playwright she has a few more chapters up her sleeve) episodes that focuses in
on the what if’s of Hero’s choices, none of which look promising.
Tom Stephenson and Sean -Yeal Cox |
Part Two: “A Battle in the Wilderness” is where we first meet
up with the Colonel who is pontificating about his fate and being as outwardly
prejudice and sadistic as possible: “I’m grateful every day that God made me
white. As a white I stand on the summit and all the other colors reside
beneath me, down below. For me, no matter how much money I’ve got or
don’t got, if my farm is failing or my horse is dead, if my woman is sour or my
child has passed on, I can at least rest in the grace that God made me white.”
Alone in a wooded area with Hero and a wounded captured Union
Captain, Smith (Sean Yael Cox) the Colonel, strumming a banjo, looking like a
joke with a huge white feather in his Confederate hat and drinking like a fish,
is on again off again worried about the cannon sounds coming from a distance
(T.J. Fuccella) and how close they are. He eventually leaves the two to their
own difficult discussions and decisions as to what their next life’s chapters
will bring.
This episode surprises and gets to the heart of the -what and
why the black community thinks and acts as they did and do. It is also most humbling
and intriguing as Parks zero’s in on the discussion of what makes a man free
and what is his worth as a free man as opposed to his worth as a slave.
Smith passing for white and for that matter a Captain in the
Union Army supposedly commands a troop from Kansas, posses several questions to
Hero that puzzle the slave as he tries to understand what freedom will look
like. “Who will I belong to?” Belonging to himself is not something Hero ever
considered. “Seems like the worth of a Colored man, once he’s free is less than
his worth as a slave.”
Wrekless Watson and Tamara McMillian |
In Part Three, “The Union of My Confederate Parts” finds Hero
in 1863 back at his Far West Texas run down plantation, where everything has
changed including his relationship not only with Penny who has been living with
Homer since Hero left but also within himself.
Before we see Hero coming home his dog Odyssey returns and
announces Hero is on his way and relates to the group outside the shack, his
whereabouts.
The group of runaways (Rhys Green, Yvonne, Leonard Pattern
acting like a Greek chorus at times) take it all in waiting for a sign of
whether to leave with or without Homer and Penny. “The place I’m going to now
is freedom.” “Slavery in a way don’t got nothing to do with our master.”
Not noticing the undertones when he does make his entrance,
Hero, now called Ulysses announces that he is married and wants Penny to get
the cabin ready for his new bride. “I went to War and I came back here, I had
to, but I didn’t have to but I did not knowing who or what I’d find waiting for
me… I did the best I could.”
The productions under the deft and fluid direction of
co-founder Christie Yael-Cox with co-direction by Antonio TJ Johnson, is
perhaps one of the most profound, oft times funny and quite disturbing play I
witnessed in some time.
Wrekless Watson and Antonio TJ Johnson |
Parts One and Two play straight through without an intermission
and Part Three follows intermission. The show lasts about three hours.
Music plays a major role in Parks’ odyssey with musician Jim
Moody playing the guitar and harmonica and generously voiced Leonard Patton (MIXTAPE)
singing accompanying blues.
Set on an almost bare stage (Sean Yael Cox) with a ramp in
the background for exits and entrances, with excellent lighting by Karin
Filijian highlighting the comings and goings. Costumes by Jeanne Reith are
eclectic and fight directors George Ye and Rhys Green make the combat between
players look so easy.
With universally outstanding acting “Father Comes Home From
The Wars” is just the tip of the iceberg as Parks is hoping to add some spice to
the conversation.
That said the dialogue she opens is still raw in the scheme
of things nearly fifty years after the Civil Rights Act of 1964 was signed and
one hundred and fifty- four years after the Emancipation Proclamation, ninety-three
years after the statue of Lee was erected in Charlottesville, S.C.
While opposition to football players kneeling during
the National Anthem will dominate the conversation and continue to stoke the the cycle of violence from the
voice in the White House the systematic violence and supression continues.
“Father Comes Home From The Wars” is not to be missed if you are truly interested in seeing prejudice through another set of eyes.
See you at the
theatre.
Dates: Through Nov. 5th
Organization: Intrepid Theatre
Phone: 888.718.4253
Production Type: Drama
Ticket Prices: $29.00-$58.00
Where: 444 Fourth Ave, Downtown SD.
Web: intrepidtheatre.org
Venue: Horton Grand
Photo: Daren Scott
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