Theater Review -- Tom Titus
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Even if at first you do succeed, why not try, try again?
That’s the prevailing mood at the Newport Theatre Arts Center where a
reprise production of Alfred Uhry’s “Driving Miss Daisy” is every bit as
dramatically satisfying, if not more so, as it was in its first
incarnation two years ago at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse.
Director Jack Millis has reassembled his three-actor cast from the
Costa Mesa show and transplanted them onto the Newport stage where, if
anything, they’re even more consistently effective in their
characterizations. The experience with the first version has instilled a
warmth and depth in their interpretations that enriches their
performances.
“Driving Miss Daisy” is set in the still-segregated South of 1948 and
travels forward in time to a more enlightened 1973 where racism still
exists, but in a more subtle form. Its story is told by only three
voices, with two others supplying unspoken atmospheric support offstage.
Miss Daisy is a crotchety old Jewish woman whose days of driving her
own car are over -- thanks to her latest accident -- but who rails at the
thought of having a chauffeur, even though his expense would be assumed
by her grown son, a rising Atlanta businessman.
Though she insists she doesn’t have a prejudicial bone in her body,
her rapport with the “colored” driver (as they were known at that time)
is one of resentment at first sight. Only the latter’s cheerfulness and
extraordinarily thick skin insure a continuing relationship -- one that’s
gradually transformed into mutual affection as they learn to depend on
one another.
Few local actresses are as accomplished as Teri Ciranna, who reprises
her feisty Miss Daisy with all the stubborn cantankerousness of her
original rendering, but seems to convey the aging process even more
poignantly as she descends into a fragile senility. Ciranna employs her
slight physicality as a contrast to her indomitable will power and
impregnable sense of superiority in another lustrous performance
garnished by the actress’ complete mastery of the facial nuance.
George Norment as Hoke, the aging, illiterate black man recruited as
her unwelcome chauffeur who becomes her staunch companion -- her “best
friend,” as she professes late in the play -- again demonstrates a sense
of enduring moral strength that bolsters his virtually unflappable
reserve. To these qualities is added a rich sense of ironic humor, which
eventually melts the old lady’s steely facade.
The play’s third character, the widow’s civic leader son, is given a
fine, realistically textured interpretation by Thom Gilbert, the
peacemaker between Daisy and Hoke. Gilbert skillfully blends his sense of
love for his mother and his sincere concern for her safety with a
reflection of the more economically motivated bigotry that still clings
to Southern mind sets.
Ciranna’s excellent performance also creates mental images of the
play’s other two, unseen, characters -- her maid and her daughter-in-law,
neither of whom occupies a lofty position in her estimation.
“Driving Miss Daisy” deserves this additional journey, reuniting the
three actors and their director in a more finely tuned interpretation.
Even if you enjoyed the first production, you’ll benefit by experiencing
the second.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
FYI
* What: “Driving Miss Daisy”
* Where: Newport Theatre Arts Center, 2501 Cliff Drive, Newport Beach
* When: 8 p.m. Thursdays through Saturdays, 2:30 p.m. Sundays until
Feb. 24
* Cost: $13
* Tickets: (949) 631-0288
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