Trump administrative policies, the Holocaust, and even the
television show “24” reverberate through the talkative, sporadically, absorbing
Off-Broadway play, Building the Wall. Playwright Robert Schenkkan, who penned the
Tony Award winning All the Way, that
focused on President Lyndon Johnson’s struggles to enact the 1964 Voting Rights
Act, once again addresses politics in his latest endeavor.
The time is the present.
The stage is a starkly furnished room-- a simple metallic table, two
chairs and a water cooler--in some unnamed federal prison. There, Gloria, a History Professor (Tamara
Tunie) is preparing to interview a soon-to-be executed inmate, Rick (James
Badge Dale) about the catalyst for a crime that has not yet been revealed to
the audience. The conversation, a back
and forth, sometimes staccato-like question and answer, begins with the
prisoner’s background and then encompasses his beliefs and motivations. The exchanges conclude with, what turns out
to be, a horrific offense reminiscent of the atrocities of the Holocaust.
There are times when Building
the Wall can be thought-provoking and provocative but, for the most part, the
dialogue is stilted and too studied. The
dramatic arc only becomes evident at the end of the production. At first, based on the title, the audience
may think the prisoner is some evil, malevolent individual steeped in the partisan
and highly charged rhetoric of the Trump administration. But as the 85 minute, intermission-less show
progresses you realize this is simply a misled individual with confused morals
caught up within a failed system that could have taken place anytime within the
past 15-20 years. His defenseless rationale
dredges up the “only following orders” mantra from the Nuremburg Trials.
Schenkkan’s approach gives the show a meandering pace. There is not a direct road map in Gloria’s
line of inquiry. It’s more like a
faculty member’s lecture that constantly darts off into tangential streams of
thought before circling back to the main point.
We also do not understand the motivation or interest in the professor’s
presence. While not totally necessary,
the reasoning would add a better layer to our understanding.
Tamara Tunie is matter-of-fact as the cool and detached professor.
The all but emotional-less delivery
serves its purpose of having her be a somewhat dispassionate observer and
chronicler of Rick’s story, but it doesn’t allow for much nuance or shading to
the role.
James Badge Dale, as Rick, initially, comes across as a
menacing presence. But he convincingly
shifts his persona through the steady outpouring of justifications and
confessions to become more of a pathetic, misguided individual. His talk of shadowy government agents and
rogue contractors seem credible and almost…almost evokes some degree of
sympathy from the audience.
Director Ariel Edelson is moderately successful in presenting
a modicum of liveliness. There is not
much in, what is essentially, a question and answer format to break-up the sameness
of the play’s structure. He partitions the
proceedings with Rick’s frequent trips to the water cooler, but there is just
so much hydration one can take. Also, the
earlier half of the show’s rat-a-tat deliver and response comes across as
rather forced and unnatural.
Maybe it’s too early in the Trump Presidency to develop a
stage production that dramatically and effectively processes some aspects of his
policies, executive orders, legislative agenda, and his erratic and uncharacteristic
Presidential behavior. Building the Wall is a worthy, but
flawed attempt, playing at World Stages Off-Broadway.
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