Recently The La Jolla Playhouse presented playwright Hansol
Jung’s “Wild Goose Dreams”. It played to relatively positive reviews. Yours
truly was not a fan.
Another of her plays “Cardboard Piano” now in a West Coast
Premiere on stage at Diversionary Theatre in City Heights through Feb. 25th
is so much more to my liking. The play and the production under the astute
direction of Jacole Kitchen bring about a partial triumph over love and hate, reconciliation,
acceptance and recovery.
In “Dreams”, the South Korean native focuses in on a North
Korean defector who left her family behind and only through the wonders of the Internet,
found romance with a South Korean father whose family now lives in the U.S. The
play pivots between North and South Korea.
“Cardboard Piano” takes place in Northern Uganda where teenagers
Chris (Kate Rose Reynolds), whose father is an American Christian missionary
and Adiel, a native Ugandan, (Andréa Agosto) are in love.
They are preparing to recite their wedding vows and get out
of dodge to settle in Tunisia. Same sex marriage is against the law in Uganda
and the girls, after their secret ceremony, plan to leave. Outside their window
a civil war rages.
Kate Rose Retnolds and Andrea Agosto |
The two dance to the music of “Unchained Melody” and prepare
to gather their things when a young Ugandan rebel, thirteen- year old Pika
(John Wells III) falls into the room and passes out. They tie him before
tending to his wounds (his ear was severed). The two girls agree, “We have to
escape this place, (metaphorically) this prison.”
To calm his nerves and rebuff Pika’s remorse at not being a
good person worthy of having a good soul, Chris tells him a little story of how
she always wanted a piano. Knowing that her parents couldn’t afford a real one,
her father made her a cardboard one of cereal boxes. It so angered the child
that she tore it to shreds.
Soon after she found the piano in her father’s study all
pieced together. “Every time we break something, it’s OK as long as we fix it.
And I did, so it’s ok.” Pika: “I do not know how to fix my soul.” This story
will come back to haunt Pika /Paul, but no spoilers here.
Now properly bandaged and successfully hiding Pika from one
of the rebel soldiers (Wrekless Watson) who came looking for him, the girls are
so relieved that they kiss for relief in celebration of their accomplishment.
Andrea Agosto and John Wells III |
Seeing this Pika, who had returned to the scene of his
rescue, is witness to this wrongful act and shoots at the girls while making a
getaway. “What were you, you were doing like a man and his wife.”
Fast forward fifteen years and Chris has returned to the
Mission to burry her father’s ashes on the hallowed grounds around the church.
Inside Paul (Wrekless Watson) the new pastor, is rehearsing his sermon in
front of his wife of two years, Ruth (Andréa Acosta) in the now fixed up chapel
her parents built.
Wrekless Watson and Andrea Agosto |
Ruth and Paul go back and forth about his sermon on
forgiveness, neighbors helping neighbors and zeroing in on just who their
neighbors might be. The discussion
volleys take on new meaning when Ruth brings up the mention of Francis (John Wells III), a young and frightened
congregant who is being banished from the church by Paul because he is a homosexual.
Jung’s play is an eye opener on all fronts but in the main
just how closely the characters and attitudes in “Cardboard Piano” mime just
what is going on in our country today. Homophobia, hypocrisy in the church by
closing eyes to abuse, xenophobia, racism, prejudice, you name it and it’s all
there. And like the message in Chris’ story, where is the forgiveness and how
do we continue to fix what we perpetuate after the Genie has been let out of the bottle?
Kate Rose Reynolds |
With strong performances by the talented, and making their
debut’s on Diversionary stage, the cast of four in ‘Piano’ forge headlong into these
probing issues.
Kate Rose Reynold' Chris has just the right looks, facial
expressions and demeanor to make her character as strong as she needs be. As the only white person and as an American, her views reflect the upight and on the other hand, non filtered opinions and accusations. She doesn't let Paul off the hook for his past indescretions, Pastor or not.
Andréa Agosto is beautifully nuanced as both Adiel and Ruth.
Her soft spoken and reassuring voice is so lyrical and expressive that one
could listen all day. Jennifer Braun Giddings' native and colorful costume in
Act II is simply stunning. Agosto wears it well.
Andrea Agosto |
Kristin Flores designed an impressive interior in both acts
aided by Chris Mueller’s lighting design and Haley Wolf’s sound design. Keeping
everything moving as it should Jacob Bruce’s fight choreography is top notch.
Wrekless Johnson serves both his characters well; first as
the brutal soldier in Act I but more commanding in his performance as Paul in
Act II trying to hide the truth from Chris and then showing the seething anger
trying to justify his place in his community.
John Wells III makes a strong impression as Pika in Act I but
his role as the young gay man being ostracized from the church is a bit
underwritten. Most of the story orbits around the other three and if some of it
doesn’t rankle you, you’re in the wrong place.
This gets two thumbs up.
See you at the theatre.
Dates: Through Feb. 25th
Organization: Diversionary Theatre
Phone: 619-220-0097
Production Type: Drama
Where: 4545Park Blvd. 92126
Ticket Prices: Start at $15.00
Web: diversionary.org
Photo: Simpatika
Great review, thank you! I noticed a number of typos you made with Wrekless' name though, whoops!
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