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Ventura’s esteemed Rubicon Theatre Company follows its cute and funny world premiere of Bad Apples with a quite memorable indeed revival of Edward Albee’s Pulitzer Prize winning musings on the nature of family and friendship, A Delicate Balance. The title refers to the delicate balance maintained by a suburban WASP couple in their marriage and home life. This Rubicon production is a perfect example of theatrical balance; everything, performances, direction, and design have come together to create about as fine a production of Albee’s contemporary classic as can be imagined.
Granville Van Dusan, in a rich and seemingly effortless performance, is stodgy Tobias, and Susan Clark, all restrained primness and starchiness, is Agnes, his wife of 40 some years. Though Agnes offers Tobias a “healthy speculation” that she may soon go mad, their life appears to be moving ahead on an even keel. It’s Friday night, and that means cocktails and conversation, voices low volume and language carefully cultivated, even when discussing mass murder. (“I can’t even raise my voice,” comments Agnes to a rarely self- assertive Tobias.) Their household also includes Claire, Agnes’s heavy drinker of a sister, brought to brassy wise-cracking life by Bonnie Franklin. Claire maintains that she is not “a alcoholic” (her wording, not mine),because “a alcoholic” can’t help herself. She is, instead, a drunk, she asserts, someone who could stop at any time and whose drinking is “merely willful.” The three are awaiting a visit from Agnes and Tobias’ adult daughter Julia (a very good Stephanie McNamara), who has just left her husband. Julia’s visit in and of itself would certainly not upset Agnes and Tobias’ delicate balance; this is her fourth marriage and her fourth return to the nest, after all.
Then however, out of the blue, arrive Edna and Harry (Amanda McBroom and Robin Gammell), Agnes and Tobias’ closest friends. Good friends they are, indeed, for when Claire asks Tobias “Would you give Harry the shirt off your back?” he responds “I suppose I would. He’s my best friend.” A theoretical shirt off Tobias’ back is one thing. Edna and Harry’s moving in with Agnes and Tobias is quite another, and that is precisely what these best friends have come to do. Unexpected visits are simply not made in Agnes and Tobias’ world, so when Edna and Harry arrive without warning on this Friday night, the only possible explanation that their friends can come up with is that they must be passing by on their way home from the club. The truth is something quite different. Sitting home on a quiet evening, the couple were suddenly overcome with a nameless “terror,” and the home of their “very best friends in the whole world” seemed the only possible destination, the only place to find “succor, comfort, warmth, a night light, a sureness that Mommy’s home.”
Agnes and Tobias aren’t terribly thrilled by the notion, especially when, the following day, Edna and Harry announce that they are returning home…for their things, but propriety demands that they keep their objections to themselves. Not so for daughter Julia, outraged that the best friends will be not staying but living…in her room. “You have no rights here,” she cries. “Does this give you rights?” Though Agnes tries hard to maintain the balance of which she is “the fulcrum,” it has clearly been disturbed, perhaps beyond repair.
Like Albee’s Who’s Afraid of Virginia Wolfe, A Delicate Balance (which debuted on Broadway four years after Who’s Afraid…) has many unexpectedly funny moments, the humor as dry as the martinis Tobias stirs. Enda tells the oft-divorced Julia, “You have not helped wedlock’s image with your shenanigans, and she casually declares to an astounded Agnes and Tobias, “Since we’re living here now…” Later, an enraged Edna (“We have rights! We belong here!) slaps Julia hard, and then explains dryly that it’s “a godmother’s duty.” Later still, there is this exchange: Agnes (the truth having dawned on her): “You have come to live with us?” Edna (matter-of- factly): “Yes, we have.” Agnes (dryly): “Then perhaps we should go to bed.”
Director James O’Neil proves his directorial finesse in maintaining a delicate balance between drama and laughs, and brings out the best from his stellar cast. In one particularly extraordinary moment early on, Amanda McBroom, seated on the sofa as the other characters converse around her, gradually begins to catch our eye. There is something not quite right in her expression. Something clearly is going on behind her troubled eyes. And before our own eyes, she crumbles, the terror she has given as the reason for their visit leading to a dazzling (and seemingly out of nowhere) breakdown. As her milquetoast of a husband Harry, Robin Gammell proves every bit her equal.
The design team which have put this production together are all experts at the top of their fields. Set Designer Gary Wissmann’s beautifully detailed upper-middle-class home could have come from Better Homes and Gardens, and Jeremy Pivnick’s lighting (indoor evening lit by table lamps, late night dimness, early morning sunrise though the windows) is his usual subtle perfection. Elizabeth A. Cox’s costumes are elegant and character defining, and Jonathan Burke deserves highest marks for his realistic sound design, one example of which is a very realistic car pulling into or out of Agnes and Tobias' driveway.
Ventura may seem a bit of a schlep, even for Angelinos who are accustomed to lengthy freeway drives, but it’s a lot closer than Broadway, and that’s about the only place you might possibly see a Delicate Balance as good as this one. The Rubicon couldn’t be finishing its current season on a brighter note.
Rubicon Theatre, 1006 E. Main Street, Ventura. September 22 through October 14th. Regular performances are Wednesdays at 2:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m.; Thursdays at 8:00 p.m.; Fridays at 8:00 p.m.; Saturdays at 2:00 p.m. and 8:00 p.m. and Sundays at 2:00 p.m. Rubicon box office (805) 667-2900. To purchase tickets online, go to www.rubicontheatre.org.
--Steven Stanley September 27, 2007
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