Todd Sussman’s HIM at
the Schoolhouse Theater: Wherefore Art Thou, Play?
David Begelman
HIM, a two-character drama written and
directed by Todd Sussman, has all the earmarks of an unfinished work. When and
if completed, it will in all likelihood stand as only a more polished—rather
than choppy and tedious—ode to incoherence. Sorry to say, the drama hardly even
begins to deliver something an audience can absorb as digestible theater.
Mr.
Sussman’s writing suggests he has been stewing—as well we all might be—over the
historical treatment of Jews. But the playwright’s preoccupation with the theme
hardly does it justice. Rather, his anger over the world’s record of
intolerance is morphed into a rambling monologue by a Jewish janitor in a museum,
a hapless fellow who seems lost in a time warp, and who can’t make up his mind
about whether life is funny, tragic, or somewhere in between.
Janitor,
responding to the provocative comments of a Monitor who is out of sight until
later on in the 90-minute play, reacts to the latter in a flurry of
observations that are a mishmash of reminiscences, accusation, rant, and
stand-up comedy adorned with emotional pratfalls. It all hangs together as
gorgeously as an assortment of wash on a multi-national clothesline.
This
is not to say that Mr. Sussman is incapable of the well-timed quip, or the
mordant observation that is right on target. But such points of contact with
the audience fall victim to sprucing up a narrative that is unremittingly obscure,
and, because of this, difficult or impossible to wrap one’s head around. The
result is a monologue that seems to go nowhere, if not one with a thrust
oblivious to all except, possibly, the playwright himself.
Janitor
(played with energy by Steve Vinovitch) inhabits a museum hall in which
Eygptian mummies and other artifacts have been on display. One of these is a
golden casket from which Janitor draws such items as the tallis, phylacteries, and black overcoat and hat familiar as
orthodox or Hasidic apparel. He dons them sporadically to score points about
anti-Semitism, while waxing ironic about his own lot.
Janitor’s
humor is often raunchy, but more often than not, rather trite. Reprising a
number from A Chorus Line, he sings,
“One little circumcision, every little step he takes…” or another ditty, “I’ll
see me in my dreams…” sung to the lilt of the familiar ballad.
At
other times, Janitor verges on a Henny Youngman comedic tack: “I’m a
substandard Jew in every respect, whose mother asked me to memorize the New
Testament,” or “My mother never went to a synagogue unless there was free food.”
Many
of Janitor’s one liners are funny, but scarcely sufficient to redeem a work that
suddenly switches to jarringly darker themes, like “spreading seed so everyone
looks like the dirty, dirty…dirty Jew.” Such ominous laments alternate with
lighter fare like the story of the Texan girl who dreamt she had a bat mitzvah, or the voice of Janitor’s
mother, Esther, recapitulating her son’s days of baseball glory (when people on occasion forget his name, he
wishes they’d call him “Sandy Koufax” rather than “Hyman Lipschitz”), or making
observations about his underwear.
When
Monitor makes a visible appearance on stage toward the end of the play, he is abjectly
apologetic about his treatment of Janitor as the latter’s unseen nemesis.
Whereas before, Monitor was “overjoyed to be the target of your venom,” now in
the flesh he goes down on his knees to beg forgiveness for his maltreatment of
Janitor.
Janitor
and Monitor’s face-off runs an inscrutable gamut from choking and displays of
karate to mutual commiseration and bonding, none of which really explains what
subtext the playwright is supposedly dramatizing.
The
Janitor’s ire over anti-Semitism is ostensibly backed up by a book he flaunts. It
is none other than A History of the Jews
by Paul Johnson, a somewhat mixed blessing as inspirational text. The author, a
conservative Catholic, implied that prophets like Isaiah foretold the arrival
of Jesus Christ (a contested, and for obvious reasons hardly a rabbinical
interpretation of Old Testament scripture), or that he was a follower of
Hillel, although there is no evidence for this surmise. Johnson also disparaged
the works of Spinoza as a “destructive Jewish spirit.” Janitor’s ironic and
often biting attitude toward anti-Semitism might perhaps have been better
served by relying on works by Elie Wiesel, Anne Frank, or Hannah Arendt.
Both
Mr. Vinovich and Lee Lobenhofer (who plays Monitor) make valiant attempts to do
justice to the drama, and their characterizations often enliven an otherwise
impenetrable script.
Shortly
after Monitor presents himself to Janitor on stage, a swing descends
mysteriously near them, a conceit showing promise of a Samuel Beckett-type
engagement of two characters. No such luck. They once again go back to either
browbeating or nursing each other, as if the abrupt fits and starts that
catapult them in opposite directions or else glue them together were somehow equivalent
to exploring depths of philosophical profundity. I doubt it.
David
Pentz’s Lighting Design, Matt Stine’s Sound, and John Pollard’s minimalist set
were all equal to a task. But what, after all, was the task of which Sussman
speaketh?
.
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