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Alfred Uhry’s Driving Miss Daisy is perhaps best known from the 1989 film adaptation which starred Jessica Tandy and Morgan Freeman, and which won Miss Tandy the Oscar at the age of 80. However “Miss Daisy” made her first appearance in a tiny off-Broadway theater in 1987, with Dana Ivey and Freeman creating the roles of Miss Daisy and her chauffeur Hoke. That Uhry’s tale of an elderly Southern Jewish widow and the African American driver foisted upon her by her adult son could work equally well on the big screen and on a small stage is testimony to its power. Now, McCoy Rigby Entertainment’s revival at the La Mirada Theatre for the Performing Arts proves that Driving Miss Daisy is equally successful performed on a Broadway- sized stage, especially in the hands of TV icon Michael Learned and her 3-time Miss Daisy costar Lance C. Nichols, under the assured direction of Brian Kite.
The current production brings back fond memories of the film’s most unforgettable scenes: the fender-bender that brought Hoke into Miss Daisy’s household, Miss Daisy’s initial stubborn insistence on going to the Piggly Wiggly by trolley, her discovery that Hoke has filched a can of salmon from her pantry, Hoke’s refusal to join Miss Daisy at the Martin Luther King dinner because her invitation came too late, Miss Daisy’s heartrending admission to Hoke that “You’re my best friend,” ex-schoolteacher Miss Daisy’s demented search for school papers decades after her retirement, and Hoke’s final visit to nonagenarian Miss Daisy in her nursing home. At the same time, Miss Daisy and Hoke’s story seems fresh and new as performed by Learned, Nichols, and L.A. favorite Morgan Rusler.
This is Michael Learned’s third time out as Miss Daisy, and Nichols’ fourth, and their experience shows in exquisitely nuanced and layered performances.
Learned’s Miss Daisy is the crotchety old lady you love to hate, or hate to admit that you love. When she crashes her car, she blames it on the vehicle, and when her son gently insists that she herself is at fault, she lashes out, “You’re just saying this to be hateful!” Anyone who’s cursed out an “old fogey” driving way under the speed limit will chuckle at Miss Daisy’s axiom, “The slower you go, the more you save on gas.” Any driver who’s ever been blamed for getting lost by the map-reader in the back seat will empathize with Hoke when Miss Daisy keeps giving him wrong directions and the two keep getting more and more lost.
Learned so disappears into the role that you forget that this is the actress who epitomized loving motherhood on the Waltons for so many years, especially with the passage of time as age takes its toll on Miss Daisy. Likewise, the energetic and erudite Lance Nichols who answered questions at Tuesday’s Q&A bears little in common with the mellow, uneducated Hoke. If one audience member commented that at times she felt she was seeing Morgan Freeman on stage, it is that the role so transformed both actors that each, independently, became the very character that Alfred Uhry so clearly and richly delineated in his script.
One of the reasons why Uhry's play is such a winner (it scored the Pulitzer Prize for Drama) is that, despite their very different educational backgrounds and stations in life, Miss Daisy and Hoke are truly each other's equals. In the same vein, the role of Hoke offers an actor equal challenges and rewards to those offered an actress by the role of Miss Daisy.
Hoke Coleburn is a man of great insight, intelligence, and wit, as when, referring ironically to some stingy Baptists he's met, "Them's the people who's callin' Jews cheap." Or when, a propos Miss Daisy's grudging agreement to let him chauffeur her around, Hoke declares, "Only took six days. Same time it took the Lord to make the world." Or when he tells his boss a plain and simple, "Miss Daisy, you needs a chauffeur and Lord knows I needs a job. Let's just leave it at that." Then, there's Hoke's laugh-getting, oft-spoken mantra "That's for him and me to know" which he trots out whenever Miss Daisy asks how much Boolie's paying him, or later, how much he paid for Miss Daisy's used car. Hoke is a man who has spent little time in school but has learned much about life, people, and self worth. When a humiliated Hoke asks Miss Daisy to let him take a break from a long interstate drive in order to "make water" in the bushes (no gas station will let a black man use their facilities), it comes as a particular shock because the way we have come to see him is so different from the way he is seen in the deep South of half a century ago.
Driving Miss Daisy the movie featured a large cast which included Boolie's wife Florine, Miss Daisy's longtime cook Idela, and others who are only referred to in Uhry's play. Miss Daisy's son is very much present in the stage version, however, and portrayed here by Morgan Rusler, one of our most versatile and in- demand character actors. It's always a pleasure to see a Rusler performance, as it is here to watch his long-suffering Boolie react once again to yet another of his mother's quirky behaviors, or to observe his respectful business dealings with Hoke.
Though Learned and Nichols have played their roles before, and opposite each other, director Brian Kite is new to the play, and just as he did when directing Proof, Kite shows a real talent in helping his actors shape multi-leveled characterizations. He also keeps the 24 scene changes moving swiftly and cinematically, with the invaluable help of John Iacovelli's mobile set, Craig Pierce's evocative lighting, and Craig Wolynez's sound design which incorporates violin/cello/banjo music from the original off-Broadway production. Judy Jou's costumes are her usual fine creations, and it is fascinating to compare the original sketches in the Miss Daisy program with their physical incarnations on the stage.
As was the case with Sylvia, the most recent McCoy Rigby production, Driving Miss Daisy proves once again that the La Mirada Theatre for the Performing Arts ranks right up with the Pasadena Playhouse in presenting exquisitely realized straight plays on a Broadway scale proscenium stage. Though it can be an equal pleasure to see a 99 seat production or one at a mid-sized theatre, there's something about a large classically designed theater that makes seeing a play there a special treat. When it is a production of the caliber of Driving Miss Daisy, it’s something to shout about.
La Mirada Theatre for the Performing Arts, 14900 La Mirada Boulevard, La Mirada. Through Sunday, February 17. Tuesday through Thursdays at 7:30 p.m.; Fridays at 8 p.m.; Saturdays at 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. and Sundays at 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. Tickets: (562) 944-9801 or (714) 994-6310. www.lamiradatheatre.com
--Steven Stanley February 5, 2008 Photos: Michael Lamont
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