Denny
Dale Bess, Nathan James, Bjorn DuPaty
by Edward Medina
Travisville is a good play. An extraordinarily
good play. The acting is stellar. The script is insightful. The direction is
spot on. The production values are top notch. Travisville must be seen
in this incarnation and in any other production that will inevitably come to
be. Presented by the legendary Ensemble Studio Theatre for its well deserved
fiftieth anniversary season, and in conjunction with the equally respected
Radio Drama Network, this is a show that oozes class and distinction from the
moment the lights hit the stage.
Based
on actual events brilliantly imagined and dramatized by playwright William
Jackson Harper, Travisville tells the story of a small Texas town
learning to find itself shortly after the signing of the Civil Rights Act in
1964. At the time Texas was a state that prided itself on the veneer of racial
civility they seemed to maintain but beneath that was a growing rot of
prejudice and inhumanity that marked the times. Plans for construction have
come to this little town and an expansion is in the works. A new commercial
district called Travisville is going to be built on prime land. The negros on
that land, all of whom have survived generations to establish and maintain
their homes, are to be relocated and the town council will not take no for an
answer. This two hour drama, including a fifteen minute intermission, focuses
on the struggles of the black ministers that represent their people, the white
mayor that represents his people, and the families that are struggling to
either keep their homes and livelihoods or stand up for a cause and possibly
lose their lives.
Bjorn
DuPaty, Sheldon Best
At
the center of the many attributes that makes Travisville work so
sublimely is the truly gifted ensemble cast. They are a unified force and there
is not one weak link in the chain. Director Steve H. Broadnax III masterfully
and seamlessly helms a cast where half the company plays multiple rolls. They
transition imperceptibly from one character to the next giving them the ability
to create an entire town in conflict. Everyone is conflicted. Everyone is torn.
The struggles are genuinely portrayed by all concerned. Leading the pack is
Brian D. Coates as the senior statesman and outgoing Elder Alden Hearst. His
performance is the rock on which all the others stand. No one in town is a true
villain, even Mayor Gillette, played with chilling restraint by Denny Dale
Bess, tries his best to keep everything on an even keel even as everything
starts to unwind.
Shawn
Randall, Sheldon Best, Lynette R. Freeman photography Jeremy
Daniel
Having
heard of the conflict, Zeke Philips, a young idealistic activist, has arrived
in town. This upstart is doing his level best to convince the homeowners that
resistance is the only way for them to gain respect and keep what is theirs. In
this role Sheldon Best delivers the fire in firebrand. Pastors Gunn and
Fletcher, who are not only wrestling over how to deal with the rising tensions,
they’re also fighting tensions between them over who deserves to succeed Pastor
Hearst. Actors Nathan James and Bjorn DuPaty are each magnetic in their
portrayals. In this male dominated world Lynnette Freeman’s heartfelt and soul
searching performance as Georgia Dawson, the wife of the town’s mechanic, helps
to illustrate the costs that can accrue when passions ignite and civility is
abandoned.
Everything
about the look and feel of the world of Travisville raises to the level of the
source material and the performers work. Set designer Milagros Ponce de Leon
not only creates a beautifully simple single multi use space, which becomes
town hall, church, minister’s home, mayor’s office and so on, she also extends
the wings on either side of the simply framed cherry wood box to either side of
the audience. Covered with facades replicating the siding of the very homes the
townsfolk are trying to protect the designer puts the audience at the center of
the action and the heart of the matter at all times.
From
the slowly rolling storm that begins the play lighting designer Adam Honore and
sound designer Shane Rettig both set the tone for not only what’s to come they
also work exceedingly well together to set the moods for each subsequent scene
that follows. Costume designer Suzanne Chesney’s work completes the look of Travisville
with costumes that bring the characters to life beautifully. All of these
artists working together give the overall production a cinematic feel that
elevates the production even further.
Travisville is the complete theatrical package of
compelling theatre and powerful message. It speaks to you in a very real,
clear, and concise voice that deserves to be heard. It’s a drama that speaks in
truths that echo through time from a past that reminds us of where we’ve come
from to a future that shows us just how much we have yet to learn. Theatre of
this caliber needs to be produced and seen as often as possible.
Ensemble
Studio Theatre
549
W 52nd Street
October
3 – Oct 28, 2018
https://www.ensemblestudiotheatre.org/new-events-2/2018/10/3/travisville
$24