Not a pretty picture, but it makes for a good play
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Tom Titus
Remember the greenhouse scene in the movie “Days of Wine and Roses”
in which Jack Lemmon tore the place apart in a drunken rage looking
for that last bottle he’d hidden there?
“Some Men Need Help,” the current production of Orange Coast
College’s OCC Repertory Company, opens on this level -- with its
alcoholic protagonist already at the bottom of the barrel. There’s
only one direction to go from that point -- up -- but it’s a long,
tortured climb on a slippery slope.
Fortunately, he doesn’t have to go it alone. A neighbor in his
suburban Connecticut tract is willing to provide the necessary
support -- for reasons playwright John Ford Noonan never quite
divulges. One must assume the good Samaritan is an AA member who’s
gone through the process himself, although this is never spelled out.
This two-character drama, under the direction of Kris Kelley,
provides some gut-wrenching moments and a superb performance by Angel
Correa as the alcoholic whose road to recovery is a painful,
uncertain process. Correa, one of OCC’s more accomplished thespians,
offers a gripping valedictory that must rank atop anything the
college’s actors have presented for some time.
In his opening scene -- hostile, trembling and possessed of a
gargantuan thirst even in the midst of a roaring hangover -- Correa
reverses the normal acting process, starting at an emotional peak and
gradually winding down to a facade of normalcy. However, just when
his character’s feet seem firmly planted on the ground again,
playwright Noonan blindsides him with a plot twist that would drive a
teetotaler to the bottle.
How the recovering alcoholic handles this cruel reversal of
fortune is the substance of Noonan’s play. And here his second
character, the interventionist portrayed by Ben Draper, plays an even
more important role than his earlier efforts to drag his neighbor
kicking and screaming into sobriety.
Draper is cool and in command, the antithesis of Correa’s
out-of-control character, and his strength makes this production an
excellent two-hander. He seemingly has all the answers, whether
dealing from a position of supportive buddy or tough-love specialist
prevailing by physical force.
Director Kelley manipulates the action with a patient, comforting
hand, never hurrying his actors when an emotional moment demands
sustained silence. David Scallion’s kitchen setting reeks of realism,
particularly in the opening scene, when one almost can smell the
stale liquor from the collection of bottles strewn about.
OCC’s Rep Company has chosen a demanding project in “Some Men Need
Help.” Fortunately, the college has two superlative actors who are
well up to its demands.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Fridays.
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