•       Home
  • Invite
  • Articles
  • Links
  • Shows
  • Events
  • Offers
  • Sponsors
  • Forum
  • Groups
  • Classifieds
  • Blog
  • Videos



SEARCH:
Browse Members

Late: a cowboy song
Published on July 28, 2010, 2:09 AM Last Update: 1 year(s) ago by Chicago Critic
Category: All Articles » Reviewer's Corner » Chicago Reviews

Late: a cowboy song

By Sarah Ruhl

Late: a cowboy song

Directed by Jessica Thebus

Produced by Piven Theatre Workshop

At the Noyes Cultural Center, Evanston

Ambiguity propels Sarah Ruhl's provocative drama

I'm not sure what to make of Sarah Ruhl's Late: a cowboy song. It is a perplexedly vague three person drama that contains multi-layered themes and meaning. I guess?

Late: a cowboy song

This strange play features a couple of child-like characters totally isolated from reality yet seeming in love since the second grade. Mary (Polly Noonan) is the dim-witted, almost retarded woman who appears to both be in love and in fear of her lover, Crick (Lawrence Grimm). He is a couch potato infatuated by holidays and Frank Capara films. He is controlling and dependent on Mary. Their world is simple place where Mary is the doting women and Crick is the household's leader.

Late: a cowboy song

Their world is changed by two events: Mary meets an old school mate, Red (Kelli Simpkins) - an independent, cowgirl who sports a ten-gallon cowboy hat, sings off key cowboys songs and breaks horses in suburban Pittsburgh. With each visit with Red, Mary moves closer to independence from Crick and apparently she is becoming emotionally attached and possibly in love with Red.

Late: a cowboy song

The second overlaying event is Mary's pregnancy that necessitates marrying Crick and insisting that he work. Crick becomes an art museum guard. Mary's baby is born with both male and female genitalia. The doctors make the child a female. She never tells Crick about that. Tension grows between Crick and Mary as Mary spends more time with Red. Mary learns how to ride horses-something that she has feared.One of the strange devices playwright Ruhl uses here is having Kelli Simpkins sing parts of a hooky cowboy song deliberately off-key as a sort of Greek chorus commenting on the previous scene. I found that irritating and unnecessary.

The play's ambiguity and the simple-minded portrait of Mary by Polly Noonan left me wondering is she just learning how to be an adult or is she just learning that she is really a lesbian? Red is so butch that gender and sexual identity sure steams between the two women. Yet we never see them kiss. We also see Crick changing from a macho guy into a more effeminate character.To me, the play seems underwritten and much to vague yet it suggests that a woman's education can be a life changing experience. This play left me scratching my head. I'm still not sure what it is about? Polly Noonan's performance is haunting

.Somewhat Recommended

Tom Williams

Talk Theatre in Chicago podcast

Date Reviewed: July 26, 2010

This review is also posted on www.chicagocritic.com

.For full show information, check out the Late: a cowboy song page at TheatreInChicago.

At the Noyes Cultural Center, 927 Noyes Street, Evanston, Il, call 847-866-8049, www.piventheatre.org, tickets $25, Thursdays thru Saturdays at 7:30 pm, Sundays at 2:30 pm, running time is 1 hour 45 minutes with intermission, through August 29, 2010

Delicious Digg Facebook Fark MySpace
Views: 209 views    Report Inappropriate Content
All Articles
Cabaret/Night Clubs  (4 articles)
Dance  (4 articles)
Fiction/Plays  (2 articles)
Food & Dining  (2 articles)
Music  (5 articles)
Concerts (5 articles)
Festivals
On-Stage  (8 articles)
Opera  (20 articles)
Classical (15 articles)
Modern (5 articles)
Opinion/Editorial  (14 articles)
Reviewer's Corner  (565 articles)
Atlanta Reviews
Austin Reviews
Boston Reviews
Charlotte Reviews
Chicago Reviews (548 articles)
Cincinnati Reviews
Cleveland Reviews
Columbus Reviews
Dallas Reviews
Detroit Reviews
Dublin Reviews
Edinburgh Reviews
Huston Reviews
Indianopolis Reviews (1 article)
Kansas City Reviews
L.A. Reviews
London Reviews
Louisville Reviews
Memphis Reviews
Miami/Ft. Lauderd... (10 articles)
Milwaukee Reviews
Minneapolis/St. P...
Montreal Reviews
Nashville Reviews
New Jersey Reviews
New York Reviews
Orlando Reviews
Philadelphia Reviews
Pittsburgh Reviews
Portland Reviews
Sacramento Reviews
San Antonio Reviews
San Francisco Rev...
San Jose Reviews
Seattle Reviews
St. Louis Reviews
Tampa Reviews
Toronto Reviews
Vancover Reviews
Washington D. C. ...
Stage Craft  (2 articles)
The Scoop  (13 articles)
Theatre Book Reviews  (17 articles)
Theatre History  (9 articles)
Related Articles
Tags: late; a cowboy song piven theatre sarah ruhl
The Three Sisters at Piven Theatre
Published on October 19, 2010, 8:13 PM
Late: A Cowboy Song at Piven Theatre
Published on August 2, 2010, 7:17 AM
Two by Pinter
Published on October 14, 2009, 3:18 PM
Copyright 2012  -  Contact Us -  About Us -  Membership Types -  Member Map -  Browse Members -  Advertise With Us -  Work With Us -  FAQ  -  Terms of Service  - 


More ...
GMap
News
Forums
There was an error processing the request. Please try again.