An Equity Co-op presented by Pink Ink / Vancouver Little Theatre
Director: Sandhano Schultze
Cast: Eric Armstrong, Ted Cole, Michael Rogers, Mark Weatherley
Set and Lighting design: Del Surjik
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Awards:
Jessie Richardson award nomination:
Outstanding Direction, Sandhano Schultze
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a review from our archives…
ACTING IS DEEP, BUT PLAY IS THIN
STEEL KISS
Vancouver Little Theatre/Pink Ink Productions
Vancouver Little Theatre, to May 26 at 8:30 p.m.
By LLOYD DYKK
‘It was an accident, we were drinking, things got out of hand,” are some of the things we hear from the four young men who, in Robin Fulford’s play Steel Kiss, have just beaten a gay man to death.
Fulford, who based his play on a similar 1985 event in Toronto’s High Park, seeks to uncover the more deep-seated reasons that could explain such behavior.
Unfortunately, not much of what it finds is very original. The play is only an hour long, which might make you think this is concision itself, but it’s a false concision, since it seems to have said pretty well every-thing it had to say in the first 15 minutes.
The four actors in the show play a considerable number of parts (and play them very well, under the direction of Sandhano Schultze), including: the toughs themselves, the school principal and the foot-ball coach, various parents, girls, cruising gay men, and many others.
But the action moves ack and forth from scene to scene and time to time ad character to character so much that the play’s techniques soon begin to call more attention to themselves than to what they should be serving. In short, it starts to look like acting class.
It’s certainly punchy. The play is highly explicit (a couple of people walked out on opening night) and Schultze’s violent direc-tion goes for the wall. He gets wonderful perfor-mances from Eric Armstrong, Michael Rogers, Mark Weatherley and Ted Cole, especially in the scenes where they’re in the park, and we see their hellish friendship for what it is: not so much friendship as a common ground in hostility, fear and confusion.
Sexuality here, among those who have only the narrowest view of what is right or what is possible, is most likely to be affirmed by playing it off innocent others – others of obvious difference, which is the real perversion. The most frightening portrait is Cole’s, whose face and, especially, eyes are a mask – rather, not a mask at all, because there’s nothing in all that scary vacuity to hide.
Del Surjik’s set (as well as his lighting) is very good. It consists only of four body outlines scrawled in white against the black, with parallel height-lines going through them, police lineup-style. With those lines slicing each figure into components, it reads something about the dissection of man’s totality.
It’s only the play itself that doesn’t measure up. It’s too fragmentary to accumulate much meaning.
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Photo: Stephen Mitchell
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