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Tag: Eureka Day

  • ‘Eureka Day’ Review: Pasadena Playhouse’s Production of the Tony-Winning School-Vax Comedy Provides Peals of Laughter

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    Is “Eureka Day,” a Tony-winning comedy now on the boards at the Pasadena Playhouse, as uproariously funny as it is because the script feels veritably ripped from today’s headlines? Or does it get its chuckles in spite of that pressing topicality? After all, not very many people are laughing right now about the battles over child vaccinations, which is the subject of the seriocomic arguments that erupt among a group of parents in Jonathan Spector’s script. But the fact that the play is now being presented as a period piece, set in the late 2010s, when it was first produced, puts us at just enough of a remove from the present madness to let down our guards and guffaw. If the climate hasn’t yet immunized you against that sort of thing.

    The primary setting is a classroom at a progressive private school in Berkeley, unfolding almost entirely in a series of board meetings where disagreements over how to handle a mumps outbreak expose deep and eventually quite angry rifts among the parents, on and off the board. The first thing to know is that, as opposed to how we might be receiving news stories about vaccine wars at the moment, this is not a right-versus-left thing. All of the parents at the Eureka Day school are liberals in good standing, just as a baseline, and the play serves as a reminder that virulent anti-vaxxers have been found on the left, too, even if we’re not hearing much from those voices right now. We sure hear a lot from them in “Eureka Day,” though, and the comedy comes from how quickly a left-leaning, peace-loving community can turn into a circular firing squad, given the right trigger.

    Strong performances are equally spread out among the five actors on stage. (Technically, there are six, but revealing the nature of the extra cameo would involve a minor spoiler.) The man ostensibly in charge of the board is a somewhat passive-aggressive fellow named Don, played by Rick Harmon, who looks and sounds a little like “Office Space’s” Bill Lumbergh, if he had something closer to a good heart. Don wants to make sure everyone is treated equally, to almost painful extremes, but is inevitably the guy most likely to step on other opinions. Anyone who’s ever been in a business meeting amid a controversy may recognize him as the type of leader who responds to something that could be an existential threat by pulling out a marking pen and inviting suggestions for a list of “action steps.” He’s villainous only to the extent that his platitudes are a time-suck.

    The three women characters are all of a more cut-the-bullshit mindset, or at least they all eventually end up there, allthough it’s at different points in the proceedings that they each arrive to peak impatience, and for quite different reasons. The clearest firebrand of the group is Suzanne (Mia Barron), whose patronizing politeness will eventually give way to rage once her views are challenged. Carina (Cherise Boothe), a Black lesbian newcomer to the school and to the board — and the audience’s surrogate for getting caught up on how things work there — is the most grounded character, with a willingness to step back and let more experienced players lead that will be challenged when things begin to spiral. It may not be an accident that Meiko (Camille Chen) has “meek” built right into her name, which portends that her eventual eruption under pressure may be the most explosive of all. What we know best about her in the early going is that she is having an affair with the second male character, Eli (Nate Corddry), although it may not count as illicit as this ultra-pleasant tech guru is allowed to experiment, in his open marriage to an unseen partner… maybe.

    In the first scene, any bickering among this mostly harmonious enough group occurs over such inconsequential agenda items as whether to add identities as specific “transracial adoptee” to a list of self-descriptors in the school’s pulldown list. That’s an example of how blatant the spoofery can be in “Eureka Day” — self-spoofery, anyway, since in its broadest strokes, the show is a satire of liberalism, but an inherently affectionate one. Conservatives might come to the show and get a kick out of the ribbing that’s doled out to the most touchy-feely wing of progressivism, although at some point they’d know this has been written as more of an intra-family fight than owning the libs.

    The idea that the infighting is all in the family gets put to the test when the aforementioned mumps outbreak occurs, and the school has to be shut down, with the debate happening over whether a vaccine mandate will be put in place before classrooms reopen. This leads to a mid-play “town hall” scene in which the board sets up an online forum for all of the school’s parents to weigh in with their opinions, which turns out to be a horrible idea unforeseeable only to anyone who’s never seen open warfare erupt in an internet forum before.

    Therein is a scene that unfolds as something really unique in comic theater. At least I can say that I don’t ever remember laughter coming across as loud in the confines of an 800-seat space as what transpires with a full house at the Pasadena Playhouse during this sequence. The funny part, if you will, is that not that much of it is due to what the cast members are doing on stage. No slight to them, at all, but they are basically playing straight men and women to the overhead screen, where we see a scroll of of the increasingly hostile messages that the parents attending the virtual meeting are sending the board and each other. At some points the laughter becomes so loud that you can’t even heard what the cast is saying on stage, and you hope that it’s inconsequential enough that you don’t need to, because the yuks are coming from the off-stage parents who, one at a time, are going completely nuclear in the chat. Finally, the board will have the good sense to just snap their host laptop shut, but not before a wickedly riotous 10 minutes or so in which absolutely no one backs away from the keyboard.

    “Eureka Day” is never going to top that extended mid-play sequence for hilarity, and so thankfully it doesn’t try. But an inevitable dip in the final scenes into something poignant doesn’t let the comedy slip completely away. Characters do come on- and off-stage during these blackouts, and the one who is putting up the greatest resistance to a vaccine mandate gives a compelling monologue explaining why she ended up there — in which you can feel playwright Spector doing his own humanist duty in reminding the audience that even the adversaries of what we’d consider reason have their reasons, as often as not.

    But the deck is stacked, so if you happen to be an anti-vaxxer, don’t come to “Eureka Day” imagining that the cards are going to be doled out equally. If anything, Spector stacks it a little more against the play’s driving anti-immunization force than he needs to, also seeming to make her a casual, if accidental, racist, one more strike against her than is really necessary. Just as it becomes all too clear what we’re going to wind up thinking of Suzanne, it’s not quite clear enough what we’re to make of Eli, the tech mogul who kind of serves a purpose as a deus ex machine at the end, or his romantic partner, Meiko. It’s nothing short of a pleasure to see Chen’s low simmer finally boil over, but then once she’s gotten mad, really mad, she retreats to the margins for the final scenes, making you wish she merited a real climax, or at least proper anticlimax, of her own.

    Those quibbles aside, it’s hard to overstate what a good time you will have settling in with this splendid cast, under the beautifully paced direction of Teddy Bergman. Spector’s dialogue is so sharp that you may find yourself making an immediate note to go see anything and everything of his that will ever pop up on the theater calendar. He’s written the kind of play where, when the last scene in (the intermission-less) action turns out to be much shorter than those that have preceded it, you may let out a sigh of disappointment, that the whole affair isn’t going to go on just a little bit longer. (You will certainly be left wondering how the original version of the play that ran in the late 2010s ended; this version has a perfect punchline that could not been written pre-pandemic, and that’s all we’ll give away about that.)

    Most of all, if you’re even close to the progressive end of the spectrum, “Eureka Day” is notable for just how much it at least regards its characters as apparently decent souls, whatever digs it gets in at their fallacies, self-delusions and eagerness to toe certain lines at any cost. Spending time with a set of sharp-talkers who bicker and break down but ultimately mean well, on some level, counts as some kind of balm in an environment where we may be coming to believe of our fellow citizens and leaders that maybe a lot of them just don’t. With the combination of wicked banter and ultimate good will that “Eureka Day” has to offer, you’d be well-advised to take the shot.

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    Chris Willman

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  • To Vax or Not to Vax: Eureka Day at 4th Wall

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    How prescient is Jonathan Spector’s Eureka Day, now rollicking and roiling at 4th Wall Theatre Company. And how present!

    As if the play had been torn from the headlines – the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices in a confusing and contentious meeting as of two days ago, Thursday, September 18, voted against vaccinating children under the age of four with a combination shot that protects against measles, mumps, rubella, and chickenpox – it’s amazing that Spector wrote this work pre-Covid in 2018. It’s so now.

    At the Eureka Day School in Berkeley, California, perhaps the “wokest” place on the planet, five parents and administrators begin the school year with a hazy quote from the 13th-century Sufi mystic Jamal Rumi. Principal Don (Philip Lehl) leads the executive committee with as gentle a touch as he can manage. Everybody’s voice is respected, each opinion taken seriously. When he must intercede, which he is loathe to do, he does it with quiet restraint. He doesn’t want to make waves. He doesn’t even want to be in the water. One of his favorite refrains is, “I don’t wish to advocate, but…” He hates conflict and would rather change the subject as soon as possible. You know everything you need to know about him when you notice his beaded bracelet and numerous finger rings.

    Along with Don, there’s Suzanne (Kim Tobin-Lehl), the president of the committee, whose sharp tongue withers the opposition; Eli (Nick Farco), a tech giant with mega bucks who loves to man-splain, and is having an affair with Meiko (Laine Chan), who knits throughout and whose daughter will bring contagion to the school; and Carina (Jasmine Renee Thomas), a new parent at the school who holds her own against the soft, not so subtle, prejudice from Suzanne who thinks Carina must be a charity case. Carina is the voice of the sane.

    The ensemble quintet shines brilliantly in their own little arias, whether obtuse or deliberate, petty or catty. Tobin-Lehl delivers a poignant monologue on the death of her baby who may or may not have been accidentally killed by a vaccine; Thomas’ rich contralto grounds our focus, keeping her center stage throughout; Lehl dithers exceptionally as he desperately tries to maintain the peace; Farco, always on edge, fidgets precisely; while Chan, whose character is a bit underwritten, gets a deserved outburst, punctuated by a comic exit trailing her wayward ball of yarn. Exceptional work by all.

    The elite private elementary school is as liberal and progressive as you can imagine in a land kindly derided as “Berserkley.” There are sweet, non-threatening slogans plastered on the classroom walls for the elucidation of the kiddies: Think Positive, Be Positive. Today a Reader, Tomorrow a Leader. Mistakes Happen, Keep Trying. Bromides abound. “No one is a villain” will be said later as the play heats up and sides are taken. The five will butt heads and quickly lose the up-tight demeanor so favored at the school and in the community. Eureka Day School is so neutral-centric that its students cheer the opposing soccer team when it scores against it.

    Civilization will not break down as neatly as in Yasmina Reza’s classic God of Savage, but Spector’s theme is very near to the French playwright’s. He pricks the pretensions of these liberals with a thousand little stiletto cuts. The genteel affability, so phony on the surface, curdles; but the play, furiously funny, is not a screed. These characters are quite human. And when they preen their goodness and fairness and D.E.I. manners, we see ourselves.

    What sets the plot spinning and the five on edge is an outbreak of mumps, started by Meiko’s daughter, who then spreads it to Eli’s son during their playdate, while Eli and Meiko play house together. To vax or not to vax gets heated debate as the concerns between school policy, their own safety worries, and the health of the community begin to pall. It’s lively, in one act, and moves swiftly under Jennifer Dean’s expert direction.

    The best scene in the play, Scene 3, is also the most hilarious. How long should the school be shut down when the health department demands vaccinations for students to attend class. The five decide to hold a live stream where other parents can participate and share their views. A screen drops down where we read the comments which grow increasingly crass and obnoxious as is usual on any open thread. It doesn’t matter what the five are trying to say to the parents, the outside group has an intolerant life of its own, and the audience laughter drowns out the actors’ dialogue anyway. It’s perfect social media satire. Inappropriate, out of hell, and truly silly. Wait for Leslie Kaufman’s gold “thumbs up” emoji that gets gales of laughter each time she posts.

    Spector’s play, which won a Tony Award for Best Revival last season, has become one of the most produced plays in the U.S. according to American Theater Magazine which documents such things. It’s easy to see why. Wicked and thought-provoking, immensely clever, it skewers the faux first-worlders as they navigate through a school pandemic without really knowing how to fix it…or themselves.

    Note: Although Mark A. Lewis’ set design is a masterclass in elementary school detail, my guest at the theater pointed out that the panorama of the Bay Bridge and surroundings seen through the school’s window is wrong. If we’re in Berkeley, the view out the window should be a long shot of downtown San Francisco. The parents at Eureka Day may be woke, but they should know their directions.

    Eureka Day continues through October 11 at 7:30 p.m. Thursdays through Saturdays; and 2:30 p.m. Sundays at 4th Wall Theatre Company, Silver Street Studios,1824 Spring Street. For more information, call 832-767-4991 or visit 4thwalltheatreco.com. $25-$70.

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    D. L. Groover

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