Images: 
Total Rating: 
***
Previews: 
September 14, 2018
Opened: 
September 23, 2018
Ended: 
October 21, 2018
Country: 
USA
State: 
New York
City: 
New York
Company/Producers: 
La Femme Theater Productions
Theater Type: 
off-Broadway
Theater: 
St. Clement's Theater
Theater Address: 
423 West 42 Street
Website: 
lafemmetheatreproductions.org
Running Time: 
1 hr, 45 min
Genre: 
Drama
Author: 
Tennessee Williams
Director: 
Austin Pendleton
Review: 

A Lovely Sunday for Creve Coeur is one of Tennessee Williams's later plays and not often produced although it exhibits Williams' beauty of language, his grace, and his search for human sensitivity and endurance. At the Theater at St. Clements, La Femme Theater Productions explores how four single women on one Sunday in Depression-era St. Louis, battle against the human loneliness reminiscent of previous Williams's literary ladies like Blanche, Amanda and Laura. It is essential Tennessee Williams, touching, delicate and yet earthy.

Williams focuses here on two female roommates, the support and the tensions between them, their individual yearnings as they live in a cluttered efficiency apartment in the mid-'30's. Bodey Bodenhafer, older, down-to-earth and affably sloppy but vain enough to hide her hearing aid with an artificial flower. Bodey has long abandoned any romantic dreams of her own. She works at International Shoe, shops at the Piggly-Wiggly and takes care of an overstuffed apartment that was designed by Harry Feiner to look as if it contains every knickknack Bodey ever bought.

In a beautifully layered performance by Kristin Nielsen, Bodey is the standout among the other women, ready to step in with a cup of coffee, words of support, and cleaning up, like throwing away a newspaper containing a hurtful item that might reveal a sharp turn in one woman's life. As the play gets going, she is frying chicken and making deviled eggs for a picnic at Creve Coeur Lake with her twin brother, Buddy and hopefully, her roommate, Dotty.

Dorothea Gallaway ("Dotty"), portrayed by Jean Lichty, is younger than Bodey, a wispy-voiced, pretty, fanaticizing Southern belle who dresses too young as she faces the dreaded old-maid years looming closer. A high-school civics teacher, she bases her salvation on marriage, hopefully with Ralph Ellis, the refined school principal she has been secretly dating.

Now, as she does her morning "setting up exercises," Dotty waits for the phone to ring. (Unlike The Glass Menagerie, this "gentleman caller" will call via telephone). Dotty is sure he is about to propose marriage, admitting to Bodey that on a recent rainy night, after one Pink Lady, she did not "hold the line with him."

Bodey is shocked. She is hoping that Dotty might marry Buddy, Bodey's beer-guzzling, overweight brother, a thought that horrifies Dotty who always insists, “To me...romance is essential." Clueless, Bodey still decides not to tell Buddy about Dotty's fall from grace.

Living upstairs is Miss Gluck, a severely depressed middle-aged woman whose aged mother recently died, leaving her daughter despondent. She only speaks German and appears at Bodey's apartment intermittently, in the midst of any chaotic moment, overcome with sobs and seeking comfort with crullers and coffee. She provides an overly histrionic ethnic touch reminiscent of The Rose Tattoo, but actress Polly McKie can make inconsolable tears hilarious, especially with surprising comic moments.

Finally, Helena (Annette O’Toole), with pretentious arrogance, arrives to see Dotty. They work together as teachers in the same school. Helena, standing apart from the other women, is dressed more stylishly by Beth Goldenberg, compared to the flouncy dress Dotty wears. Helena makes sure she expresses that and any other disparaging opinions. She scorns Dotty's current living conditions, Bodey and especially Miss Gluck.

Secretly, Helena and Dotty have made plans to move into an new upscale apartment and now Helena has come for the rent. When Dotty realizes she cannot afford this expensive move, Helene is outraged. Revengeful, she searches for the morning newspaper with an announcement that shatters Dotty's dreams.

Yet there is an ending of hope and compromise. Over the hours of one Sunday morning, Williams reveals his trademark understanding of loneliness and life with its needs for friendship, support and perhaps accommodations that should be made. With poignancy is humor, the emotions combined with a gentle charm by four actors who understand Williams and his women and can communicate their sensitivities. In a smooth flow, director Austin Pendleton brings out the unique eccentricities of each woman, linking their individual delusions and anxieties with universal humanity.

Cast: 
Kristine Nielsen, Annette O'Toole, Polly McKie, Jean Lichty
Technical: 
Set/Lighting: Harry Feiner; Costumes: Beth Goldenberg; Original Music/Sound: Ryan Rumery; Wigs & Hair: Leah Loukas: Dialects/Dramaturg: Amy Stoller; Production Stage Manager: Marci Skolnick
Critic: 
Elizabeth Ahlfors
Date Reviewed: 
September 2018