‘On the Mountain’ peaks in SCR premiere
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Tom Titus
There is a moment, in the second act of Christopher Shinn’s “On the
Mountain,” now in its world premiere at South Coast Repertory, when
the play’s leading actress -- the remarkable Susannah Schulman --
grabs her audience by the heart and clings for dear life as years of
past indiscretions and casual romances rise up to torment her. And
we, breathlessly, share her agony.
“On the Mountain” takes a subject most identifiable to youthful
audiences -- the Seattle grunge music scene of the early 1990s -- and
makes it not only palatable but captivating to older audiences whose
appreciation of rock ‘n’ roll expired when The Beatles disbanded.
This is due largely to the superbly personal direction of Mark
Rucker, who elicits extraordinary interpretations of four quite
ordinary characters.
Shinn’s play is set in 2003, a decade after the suicide of Nirvana
frontman Kurt Cobain, and incorporates a Cobain-like character as a
hovering specter in the background, a musical guru to a now-grown
generation struggling to live down its past follies. Schulman’s
character, the mother of a teenage daughter by the aforementioned
icon, ekes out a living as a waitress who’s been sober for a dozen
years while trying to steer her daughter away from the same
unfortunate choices she once made.
So far, however, young Jaime (Daisy Eagan) is heading down the
same rocky path. She’s a heavy smoker -- placed by her psychiatrist
on Prozac -- who uses a night at home alone for some serious binging,
but surprisingly sympathetic, as drawn by Shinn and magnified by
Eagan. Jaime displays some serious talent for writing, even though
her prose is incomprehensible to her mother.
Enter a potential love interest for Mom -- Nathan Baesel in an
earnest, agreeable performance of a disarmingly duplicitous character
-- who maintains a special reverence for Jaime’s late father. Baesel
and Schulman conduct a most sensitive, believable courtship, which
makes their eventual parting a disappointment for all concerned.
Baesel is especially believable in his demonstration of concern for
Jaime -- which renders his final act all the more incomprehensible.
Schulman is magnificent as she displays her character’s
love-starved vulnerability -- she makes the first move with Baesel,
just as she does later with Matt Roth, a guy she meets in an
Alcoholics Anonymous meeting (even though he’s dealing with a heroin
addiction). Her aching desire for committed romance is outpaced only
by her overwhelming involvement in Jaime’s welfare.
There is a scene between mother and daughter, which precedes the
aforementioned wrenching moment, that gives a new meaning to the
phrase “tough love.” Both Schulman and Eagen are brilliant in their
interpretations of filial, and physical, angst.
The living room and backyard Portland, Ore., setting is
beautifully realized by Donna Marquet, abetted nicely by Rand Ryan’s
lighting effects. And, fortunately, the moments of ear-splitting
“now” music are few and far between.
Christopher Shinn, still shy of 30 when “On the Mountain” was
written, is emerging as a playwright of insight and magnitude. His
next work will be eagerly anticipated.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Fridays.
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