All That Jazz
By Ross von MetzkeJeremy Gabriel and Luke MacFarlane
The story of authors Ernest Hemingway (Jeremy Gabriel) and F. Scott Fitzgerald (Luke MacFarlane of TV's Brothers & Sisters ) and their unusual, codependent -- and, at turns, bordering on sexual -- relationship takes the audience on a fast-paced ride through the highs and lows of the Jazz Age, a period from 1918 to 1929 when Fitzgerald's career flourished, then fell apart, and Hemingway clawed his way from relative obscurity to great American author.
The pair make for an odd couple -- Hemingway, masculine and secure; Fitzgerald, at times euphoric and childlike, but often crippled by a lifelong battle with alcoholism and an overwhelming need to top his life's great work, The Great Gatsby.
Along for the ride is their female foil, Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald (Heather Prete) -- platinum blond, oozing sexuality -- the love of Scott's life, he says, though the two spend the bulk of the play building each other up just to rip it right back down again.
Scott's real fascination is with Hemingway. The two box, drink, talk literature -- they even compare dick sizes in one of the play's more heated moments. They can't be together, but they can't seem to stay apart for long. They are the real loves of each other's lives, though -- at least in The Jazz Age -- for the most part, it's strictly platonic.
Luke MacFarlane and Heather Prete
The third wheel, Prete is faced with a difficult task -- make your trademark whiny, sexpot southern belle sympathetic. It takes her a while (mostly because her character is the least fleshed out of the three), but when Zelda's mind begins to unravel, Prete lets loose -- a scene in a mental hospital is particularly fine.
Sets are minimal, and that suits the play just fine. Save for the occasional almost bedroom tryst and a whole lot of drinking, The Jazz Age is really about these three actors. The play's abrupt ending is a bit of a jolt and takes a while to swallow, but as with the rest of the play, it goes down -- that it takes a bit of energy from the audience to let it all soak in seems oddly fittings ... as if Fitzgerald and Hemingway wouldn't have it any other way.
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