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‘Heart’ of the matter
June 21, 2012 |
By Patrick Folliard on June 21, 2012
‘The Normal Heart’
Through July 29
Arena Stage
1101 6th Street, SW
$40-$94
202-488-3300
arenastage.org
Larry Kramer’s “The Normal Heart,” is aging well, breathtakingly so.
This was proved last year on Broadway and it’s being demonstrated again
with a powerfully searing production now playing at Arena Stage.
When Kramer’s biographical take on the early days of the AIDS crisis
premiered in New York in 1985, gay men were dying in large numbers and
then-President Reagan had yet to utter the word “AIDS” publicly, so not
surprisingly the gay playwright’s words reportedly rang angry and
alarmed. Today, Arena’s stripped-down and fast-paced revival helmed by
gay director George C. Wolfe (who co-staged the Tony-winning Broadway
version) still conveys the fury and fear while embracing the empathy and
sadness also found in Kramer’s stunning play.
Kramer’s script wastes no time in establishing the horror of the
situation. Seated in their doctor’s waiting room (circa 1981 Manhattan),
several gay men tensely discuss the still nameless plague that is
making them ill and killing their friends. They talk early symptoms
(swollen glands, night sweats, fatigue), treatment (almost nothing) and
chances of survival (slim). As one patient exits the office revealing a
youthful face jarringly marred by Kaposi sarcoma lesions, another enters
collapsing from the effects of a violent seizure. The plague is on and
it’s going to get worse.
The action focuses on irascible but likeable writer/activist Ned
Weeks, a Kramer stand-in superbly played with nuance and great heart by
Patrick Been. After several informational meetings and an examination
with Dr. Brookner (Patricia Wettig), a prickly physician whose patients
include many of the epidemics’ first victims, Ned is convinced that gay
men will need to save themselves. He suspects the disease is sexually
transmitted.
Determined to rally gays to action, Ned creates an advocacy group
similar to Gay Men’s Health Crisis (co-founded by Kramer), and manages
to grow the organization despite a lack of support from closeted New
York City Mayor Ed Koch and a largely apathetic gay community.
Eventually, Ned’s co-members, wrongly but understandably, reject his
increasingly angry style as well as his promotion of total abstinence
(the concept of safe sex would come later). “We just feel that you can’t
tell people how to live,” says Bruce (Nick Mennell), one of the
organization’s more popular members. Ned is forced out.
More than a tirade, “The Normal Heart” is also an absorbing family
drama. Ned has the love and support of his hotshot lawyer brother played
by John Procaccino, but yearns for his total acceptance. It’s also a
medical mystery and quite strikingly, a sweet love story. While the
plague rages, Ned unexpectedly finds love with Felix, a New York Times
style writer beautifully played by handsome gay actor Luke Macfarlane.
He’s Ned’s first serious lover.
In the second act when Felix is diagnosed with the deadly virus, he
warns Ned that things will become messy, and indeed they do. Messy and
heartbreaking, as evidenced by the ongoing sniffles and stifled sobs
heard throughout Arena’s Kreeger Theatre.
Plague weary, the central characters finally crack in a series of
emotionally raw monologues. Beleaguered activist Mickey (subtly played
by Michael Berresse) considers suicide; the typically reserved Dr.
Brookner rails against the smug government doctor who refuses her
application for a grant; conservative Bruce, a bank V.P. and former
Green Beret, dissolves to tears explaining his late lover’s humiliating
death; and Ned fiercely expresses his disappointment with the gay
community’s inadequate early response to the epidemic.
David Rockwell’s stark set is quietly monumental: White walls
embossed with AIDS-related words and phrases (also white) which —
depending on the David Weiner’s smart lighting — can or cannot be seen
in relief. Also, various locale descriptions and, most affectively, the
names of actual AIDS victims are projected on to the set. As the play
progresses, these projected names grow exponentially.
The terrific cast also includes Christopher J. Hanke as Tommy
Boatwright, a saucy but caring southerner; Jon Levenson as the mayor’s
imperious aide de camp; local actor Chris Dinolfo is the young patient
with K.S; and Tom Berklund plays Grady, a dim but well-built volunteer.
For Kramer, who learned he was HIV-positive in 1988, “The Normal
Heart” might simply serve as proof that he was right all along, but
that’s antithetical to his fighting spirit. At Arena, leaflets penned by
Kramer decrying the un-won global war on AIDS are distributed to
audience members as they leave. The battle continues
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