Total Rating: 
***1/2
Opened: 
April 15, 2008
Ended: 
May 11, 2008
Country: 
USA
State: 
New York
City: 
Rochester
Company/Producers: 
Geva Theater Center in assoc w/ Indiana Repertory Theater
Theater Type: 
Regional; LORT
Theater: 
Geva Theater Center - Mainstage
Theater Address: 
75 Woodbury Boulevard
Phone: 
585-232-2250
Genre: 
Drama
Author: 
August Wilson
Director: 
Seret Scott
Review: 

Most August Wilson plays build initial momentum with a loud, annoying character who often turns out to be the center of the play's ideas. The tough assignment is for the actor to make him rankle enough to stir things up but not turn the audience off so much that they stop paying attention to him. In 1989's Pulitzer Prize-winning The Piano Lesson, Boy Willie disrupts his sister's, Berniece's, household wanting to sell the family piano. Dynamic Carl Coffield makes Boy Willie annoying and disturbing but sexy and intriguing enough for us to want him to stick around. The fascinating piano has beautifully carved memorial portraits of their family members traded off as slaves to pay debts. So Berniece sees herself as preserver of the family heritage and refuses to sell it. But Boy Willie wants to sell it to buy the land the family was enslaved upon, to move forward, not merely regard their past with rueful reverence.

It's a rich, flavorful play filled with involving characters, comic wit, much music, and – like all the ten-play cycle (each play about a different decade) a masterful, memorial history of African-American life. The overwrought ending is unnecessarily mystical (Wilson is seldom satisfied with merely symbolic ghosts; he likes supernatural high jinks), but it plays like gangbusters, even if most take it not as deeply spiritual but as fantasy fun. And the set pieces, lighting and special effects work wonderfully.

Karen Perry's costumes include some delicious, laugh-getting outfits for the old-fashioned, touring lounge performer Wining Boy, Boy Willie's uncle. Actor/musician Glenn Turner has a field day playing Wining Boy.

Thee uniformly strong cast, tautly directed by Seret Scott, make this a worthy revival in Geva Theater Center's continuingly first-class presentations of Wilson's epic recreation of African-American history. Looking at the hill district of Pittsburgh from the end of the nineteenth century to the end of the twentieth, these plays cover far more than a century of racial struggle. They suggest – with all their overplayed symbolisms – a human tradition as old and encompassing as the written word.

Geva opens <I>The Piano Lesson</I> next week. This is the fourth of 10 August Wilson dramas staged by Geva Theatre Center.

Cast: 
Carl Cofield, Jessica Frances Dukes, Warner Miller, Chuck Patterson, Roslyn Ruff, Glenn Turner, Geoffrey D. Williams, Jessa Audrey Glaspa or Xiomara Fugueroa
Technical: 
Set: Russell Methany; Costumes: Karen Perry; Lighting: Michael Lincoln; Sound: Todd Mack Reischman
Miscellaneous: 
As part of artistic director Mark Cuddy's plan to produce all the plays of August Wilson, Geva Theater Center is not only offering Wilson's <I>The Piano Lesson</I> but is also bringing in Wilson specialist Stephen McKinley Henderson to rehearse and direct cast members of that show in a special single performance of Wilson's <I>Ma Rainey's Black Bottom</I> with free reserved seats on Monday night, May 5. That performance, a staged reading, will include Ebony Jo-Ann, a member of the original 1984 cast, playing Ma Rainey.
Critic: 
Herbert Simpson
Date Reviewed: 
April 2008