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Though the coming out/coming of age story has been told time and again, it is one that bears retelling, especially when told as freshly and smartly as Jonathan Tolins does it in Secrets Of The Trade, now playing at the Black Dahlia Theatre. Tolins’ play is, as well, a perfect example of why L.A. theater, especially theater of the “waiver” variety, can hold its head high and proud amidst any theatrical community. It is no wonder that Tony-winning multiple- Broadway-shows-to-his-credit John Glover has chosen to appear in a tiny theater on Pico Blvd. A production as fine as this one gives Glover a role he was, as they say, born to play and surrounds him with talent worthy of any Broadway stage.
Tolins, who also wrote the powerful Twilight Of The Golds, recounts the tale of Andy Lipman, a 16-year-old theater geek (the gifted Edward Tournier) who one day writes a letter to his idol (Glover as 6-time Tony winning actor/director Martin Kerner) and two years later gets a response which alters the course of his life. We follow Andy, his parents (the divine Amy Aquino and the wonderfully folksy Mark L. Taylor), and Kerner’s acerbic assistant Bradley (the always watchable Bill Brochtrup) through the decade of the 80s as Andy moves from gifted, gawky teen to successful and self-assured adult. Secrets Of The Trade feels like a favorite movie, one that you plop into your DVD player and watch again and again. It is cinematic in the best sense of the word, and yet very theatrical (also in the best sense), thanks to director Matt Shakman, his superb cast, and a design team that once again makes the tiny Black Dahlia theater look like a million bucks.
Andy may be young when Secrets begins, but he is hardly lacking in chutzpah. In the letter he has written to Kerner in hopes of becoming his assistant, Andy informs him that “my father says you can use my help.” Andy saw his first Broadway show (Kerner’s Flash In The Pan) at age 7 and he’s been hooked (on theater and on Kerner) ever since. Andy’s mother Joanne worries about Andy’s letter to Kerner. There’s been “talk” about the man, and as we later learn, Joanne has suspicions that her son and Kerner may be “different” in the same way.
Tolins knows how to be funny without crossing the line into sitcom humor. Take for example one of Kerner’s credits, Disraeli: The Musical. (Imagine that one!) Or Andy’s telling Kerner that “I always planned a life in the theater. I made my parents throw my first birthday party at Sardis.” Or when Kerner tells the impressionable teen that “good theater has to hit you in your head, your heart, and your dick,” and Andy responds, “Do you think I’m leaving one of them out.”
The latter exchange is just the kind that Andy’s mom has been worrying about. She, and we in the audience, can’t help wondering why this older (and obviously gay) man is showing such interest in a clearly adorable and desirable teen. Is it just coincidence that Kerner waited until Andy was “legal” to answer his letter? It is to Tolins credit that he never allows Kerner to become a gay cliché. In fact, he has created not just one but three very real, very rounded gay characters. I particularly liked Andy’s parents’ quite different responses to suspicions that their only child is gay—mom Joanne wondering aloud if perhaps he just might be and dad Peter countering that “until he says something, we don’t know.” (I wonder how many times a day this conversation is uttered in American homes.)
There’s also a still relevant argument late in the play between Andy and Kerner regarding Kerner’s refusal to come out publicly, Andy urging him to become a role model to gay teens, Kerner protesting that only people who are ready to hear the truth ought to be told. It is to Glover and Brochtrup’s immense credit that neither actor lives in Kerner’s closet.
Tournier perfectly captures Andy’s wide-eyed innocence, gradually allowing him to become older, more confident, and wiser, so that by play’s end, we truly feel that we are seeing a 10-years-older version of the sweet-16-year-old we met at curtain up. Aquino follows her fine recent turn in A Feminine Ending with an even better one here. Her Joanne is a mother willing to defend her son like a tigress, yet someone who also understands his hopes and dreams. (She was a dancer who once auditioned for Kerner “in another life.”) Aquino also delights in a cameo as raspy-voiced “legendary agent” Florence. The actress is perfectly complemented by Taylor’s ingratiating work as Andy’s dad, a cousin to TV’s Mr. Rogers, and like Aquino, he gets to play several roles, all of them splendidly. Brochtrup once again proves (as he did in Theater District, Pera Palas, Small Tragedy, and the recent Tonight At 8:30) that he is one of our most talented and interesting actors. A lesser actor might have played Bradley as nothing more than the “gay assistant” stereotype. Brochtrup plays the man.
Finally, there is Tony-winner Glover playing Tony-winner Kerner, and so magnificently that were this show running on Broadway, he’d likely be a shoo- in for another. Glover is perhaps best known for portraying good and evil twins James and John Jeckyll in both stage and film versions of Terrence McNally’s Love! Valour! Compassion!. Complex characters each of them, neither holds a candle to the complexity of Kerner, who combines the qualities (good and bad) of both. Is Kerner mentor, inspiration, seducer? In Glover’s beautifully nuanced performance, we see elements of all of the above. His best of many great moments comes in an exquisitely written and performed speech to Joanne about what exactly it is that the 60ish Kerner gets from the 20ish Andy. Brilliant.
As he did in Tryst (the Black Dahlia’s award-winning long-running hit of last year), set designer Craig Siebels has created a set which makes the best, and most creative, use of the Dahlia’s long, narrow stage. Downstage becomes the Lipmans’ Massachusetts home (among other locations) while upstage serves mostly as Kerner’s office. In one particularly inspired moment, Tolins’ script, Siebels’ set, and Mike Durst’s outstanding lighting design all come together to splendid effect. As Andy stands downstage and tells us (quoting from his letter to Kerner) that “I didn’t even know what a scrim was,” the lights go on upstage revealing Kerner reading Andy’s letter and we see that the wall in front of which Andy is standing is in fact a scrim. Another great script/direction/set/lighting moment occurs as we follow Andy and Kerner on a walk from his upstage office to a café which has miraculously appeared downstage in the dark as Durst’s lighting has kept our attention on the two men walking. Also doing excellent work are Joel Spence (sound designer), Elizabeth Brooks (costume designer) and Michele Miatello, who designed the projections which allow the set to become a swank restaurant, a New York park, and a California palm tree lined street among other locales.
Director Shakman, who is also Black Dahlia’s Artistic Director, can be justly proud of his work here, of the performances he has elicited from his cast, and of the overall high quality evident in every aspect of this production. Like others before it, Secrets Of The Trade is likely to be settling into a long and very popular run at the Dahlia.
Black Dahlia Theatre, 5453 West Pico Blvd., Los Angeles. Through April 20. Wednesdays-Saturdays at 8 PM, Sundays at 7 PM No performances Wednesday March 26 and Thursday March 27 Additional performances Tuesday April 8 at 8:00 and Tuesday April 15 at 8:00. Tickets: 1-800-838-3006 or http://www.brownpapertickets.com/producer/7215
--Steven Stanley March 20, 2008 Photos: EB Brooks
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