Black experience amplified in SCR’s ‘Intimate Apparel’
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Tom Titus
In 1905, barely four decades after the Civil War, most emancipated
African-Americans had little cause for celebration. For the most
part, they found themselves working twice the hours for about half
the pay of their light-skinned counterparts.
Playwright Lynn Nottage pays tribute to her ancestors of a century
ago in her latest work, “Intimate Apparel,” which is receiving its
world premiere on the Segerstrom Stage of South Coast Repertory. It’s
a moving, engrossing, if ultimately uneven story beautifully depicted
under the direction of Kate Whoriskey.
In this amalgam of history and fiction, Nottage’s characters burn
brightly as representatives of a time and place -- a New York City
garment factory and, as a significant appendage, the Panama Canal in
the midst of its construction. In this background, Esther Mills, a
Negro woman unmarried and still virginal at 35, sets out on a
determined course to avoid approaching spinsterhood.
She can neither read nor write, but with assistance from friends
black and white, she conducts a long-distance correspondence with
George Armstrong, a West African man laboring on the canal -- also
illiterate, though each keeps this shame from the other.
A sight-unseen proposal, an awkward marriage and the predictable
disappointment that follows are depicted with heartfelt emotion in
the SCR production, which reaches repeated peaks and valleys. It is
on the latter plane that “Intimate Apparel” closes, however, leaving
its audience yearning for a more satisfying denouement.
One factor that definitely does not disappoint is the outstanding
performance of Shane Williams as Esther, whose lifelong determination
to better her station dissolves in a moment of irrational optimism.
Williams draws her audience into her heart and soul, sharing her
hopes and dreams with a mixture of strength and naivete.
As the charismatic canal worker who woos her by mail with
unbridled enthusiasm, Kevin Jackson is charged with the difficult
task of turning his character around 180 degrees in the second act.
That he succeeds as well as he does in his presentation of
alternating strength and weakness is a testimony to his performing
skills.
Erica Gimpel has the play’s showiest role, that of a hooker in the
city’s seedy Tenderloin district, and she takes full advantage of the
opportunity in a richly robust interpretation that deftly avoids the
taint of cliche. Sue Cremin impresses as an upper-class matron who
offers Esther a surprising and shocking alternative lifestyle.
Esther’s one true supporter, her longtime landlady, is played with
homespun heartiness by Brenda Pressley. Steven Goldstein contributes
an interesting performance as a Jewish garment maker who, like
Esther, is betrothed to someone he’s never seen and maintains a tight
rein on his true feelings.
Walt Spangler’s sprawling, multi-unit setting allows for multiple
usage, particularly the bed that serves as its centerpiece. The
period costumes of Catherine Zuber and Scott Zielinski’s intriguing
lighting designs further enhance the physical charm in a sepia,
vintage photograph atmosphere.
Nottage has a potentially important work in “Intimate Apparel,”
once she polishes the play’s inconclusive second act. As it stands,
the history -- and Williams’ immaculate performance -- are quite
enough to merit a recommendation.
* TOM TITUS’ reviews run Thursdays and Saturdays.
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