In ‘Three Tall Women’ and ‘Yerma,’ Stunning Portraits of Women on the Verge: REVIEW

In ‘Three Tall Women’ and ‘Yerma,’ Stunning Portraits of Women on the Verge: REVIEW

Two of the best productions in New York right now are knocking the wind out of audiences with vivid and bracing insights into the female psyche.

Edward Albee’s 1994 Pulitzer winner Three Tall Women, which opened last night in its Broadway premiere, receives a magnificent revival from director Joe Mantello, featuring master class performances from screen legend Glenda Jackson, the incomparable Laurie Metcalf, and Alison Pill, as one woman looking back on life from her deathbed. Across town at Park Avenue Armory, London’s Young Vic production of Yerma, a modern adaptation after Federico García Lorca, introduces American audiences to a virtuosic Billie Piper, as a woman gradually consumed by her struggle to conceive.

We meet Albee’s three women in a tastefully lavish pre-war bedroom (designed by Miriam Buether) belonging to the eldest among them, as formidable as she is fragile at just north of 90, brilliantly played by Jackson. With the matter-of-fact wit and grit that is Metcalf’s signature, in the play’s first part she plays the woman’s nurse and de facto sole companion. Pill is a young lawyer who’s come to look in on the old woman’s unpaid bills, clearly an outsider to the pat routine between caregiver and charge.

The play’s pivot point, which Mantello finesses with a visual flourish, finds all three playing the elderly character (said to be modeled on Albee’s adoptive mother) at different stages of her life, reflecting on her path and the choices she’s made.

As a firebrand facing death, somewhat helplessly in the first part and with great circumspection in the second, Jackson delivers an intricate, razor-sharp performance that already feels like theatrical legend. Metcalf is in top form in both roles, punching every syllable with vigorous interior life. Nearly as headstrong but far more naive, Pill’s younger characters are most often on the receiving end of hard-won wisdom, as the actress holds her own against two towering greats. The synergy among all three is a marvel, lifting Albee’s meditation on the mortality to soaring heights.

The beginnings of life are the focus of writer-director Simon Stone’s arresting and sensory-pounding Yerma, a deft modern update of Lorca’s 1934 poetic drama. Billie Piper plays a successful London journalist (called simply ‘Her’ in the script) who’s just moved into a new house with her not-quite-husband John (Brendan Cowell). (“Follow the lesbians,” John says of gentrification.) She’s just north of 30, and as they lie sprawled on their new floor swigging Veuve Clicquot, broaches the subject of kids for the first time. John makes a gallant show of stomping on her birth control pills as they agree to start trying.

Stone’s production is set between panes of glass in what essentially looks like a terrarium meant for humans (scenic design is by Lizzie Clachan). Seated on either side, audiences observe from a sort of scientific remove — but the action behind the divide feels startlingly real. As days, months, and years pass in blackouts between scenes, her determination only grows more intense as her prospects of becoming pregnant grow increasingly remote. Meanwhile, her sister Mary’s (Charlotte Randle) ambivalence toward parenthood only seems to make Mary more fertile, and their mother Helen (Maureen Beattie) is the furthest from maternal among them.

Tracing a spiral that turns on hopes and anguish faced by countless women, Piper’s performance is a tour-de-force from blithe start to bitter end. The entire cast, like Stone’s visually surprising production, is fine-tuned to optimize the story’s jolting emotional impact, by drawing us in so close we could press our noses against the glass.   

The spring arrival of these two visceral, thought-provoking productions focused squarely on the experiences of women feels like the season’s first gusts of fresh air.

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Follow Naveen Kumar on Twitter: @Mr_NaveenKumar
(photos: stephanie berger, brigitte lacombe)

The post In ‘Three Tall Women’ and ‘Yerma,’ Stunning Portraits of Women on the Verge: REVIEW appeared first on Towleroad.


In ‘Three Tall Women’ and ‘Yerma,’ Stunning Portraits of Women on the Verge: REVIEW

Troubling Reports Surround Family of 8’s Fatal Plunge Off California Cliff

Troubling Reports Surround Family of 8’s Fatal Plunge Off California Cliff
hart family

Jennifer Jean Hart and Sarah Margaret Hart, both 38, and their children Markis, 19, Abigail, 14, and Jeremiah, 14, of Woodland, Washington were killed when their SUV plunged 100 feet off a California cliff on Monday.

Three other children, Hannah, 16, Sierra, 12, and 15-year-old Devonte, who was the subject of a viral photo last year which showed him embracing a Portland police officer, are still missing and presumed dead.

The Oregonian reports:

The crash occurred days after authorities in Washington tried to visit the family home multiple times after receiving reports of abuse and neglect concerning the children.

At a news conference Wednesday, Mendocino County Sheriff Tom Allman said officials have “every indication to believe” all six children were in the vehicle when it went off the cliff.

“We have no evidence and no reason to believe this was an intentional act,” Allman said. He also said there are no skid marks or brake marks indicating why the vehicle went off the cliff. He said an investigation is ongoing.

The sheriff appealed for the public’s help in retracing where the family had been in recent days.

Dana and Bruce Dekalb, who were neighbors of the Harts, reported the family to Child Protective Services, they said, because some of the children, including Devonte, had come to them asking for food and telling them they didn’t want to go home.

KGW adds:

Clark County sheriff’s deputies returned to visit the home Tuesday, after they received a request from California authorities to check on the home. They told California authorities it appeared the family left on a temporary trip. No one was there, but animals and family belongings were still at the home.

One of the mothers pleaded guilty to charges of domestic assault in 2011, after police in Minnesota said Sarah Hart hit one of her daughters.

A teacher initially called police after seeing bruises on the 6-year-old girl’s stomach and back. According to court documents, the girl later told a detective and social worker that her mother hit her, leaving bruises.

Detectives followed up with Sarah and Jennifer Hart. According to the criminal complaint, Sarah admitted to a detective they had recently started spanking one of her daughters to deal with her behavior. She said she brought her daughter into a bathroom, bent her over a tub and hit the girl.

The cause of the crash remains under investigation.

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Troubling Reports Surround Family of 8’s Fatal Plunge Off California Cliff

Trans Day of Visibility: Living Authentically

Trans Day of Visibility: Living Authentically

Transgender people come from all walks of life — we are parents, siblings, children. We are your coworkers and your neighbors. We are seven-year-old kids and we are 70-year-old grandparents. We are a diverse community representing all racial and ethnic backgrounds, as well as faith backgrounds.

International Transgender Day of Visibility (TDOV) is marked every year on March 31. It is a time to celebrate transgender people around the globe and the courage it takes to live openly and authentically, while also raising awareness around the discrimination trans people still face.

The journey toward living openly and authentically looks different for everyone, and, given the levels of violence and discrimination faced by transgender and gender expansive people, revealing and expressing one’s gender identity can be a complex and difficult process.

In honor of TDOV, members of HRC’s staff share what visibility means to them:

“I’ve made the conscious decision to be out and visible in my life since my twenties. It was just too painful not to fully reveal and embody who I am. Through my work I meet transgender people every week whose lives are positively impacted by being welcomed and supported in their places of work. Sometimes work is the only place where they are fully embraced for their true and unique selves. The experience of being out, visible and welcomed for who they are is transformative. Not only are their lives changed, but so is mine!”
— Beck Bailey, HRC Deputy Director, Workplace Equality Program
Pronouns: he/him/his

“Even though at 6-years-old, I’d go to bed each night wishing I’d wake up a boy, it wasn’t until much later that I actually knew transgender men existed. That was when I heard the tragic story of Brandon Teena. It’s vital to lift up these stories of violence, to show the world what transgender people — and especially transgender women of color — are facing each and every day. At the same time, it’s important to lift up all our stories. Stories of joy and sadness, of creativity and creation. Stories of conflict and change, of perseverance and justice. Being visibly transgender is privilege that carries risks, but it also carries rewards. It’s about giving people — of all races and genders, of all abilities and religions, of all walks of life — mirrors in which they can also see themselves and their friends and their families.”
— Jay Brown, HRC Deputy Director, Programs, Research & Training
Pronouns: he/him/his

“Visibility for the transgender community is vital. If it weren’t for people like Janet Mock, Danica Roem and Sarah McBride being out and living their true selves, I would never have felt comfortable being my true self. It’s crucial that when possible, we express our truth to the world. We make it a little easier for the next trans person — often a child — to do the same.”
— Charlotte Clymer, HRC Press Secretary, Rapid Response
Pronouns: she/her/hers

“Visibility for me goes beyond the personal. I include pronouns in my email signature, on name tags, and when I introduce myself to someone. But it is also about creating the space for others to be visible – proactively asking people for their pronouns, encouraging others to list pronouns on name tags or in email signatures. Visibility for me provides the opportunity to educate others.
— Candace Gingrich, HRC Associate Director, Youth and Campus Engagement & HRCU Internship Coordinator
Pronouns: they/them/theirs

“Embodying this non-binary trans identity unapologetically is a choice I make every day and in every interaction. I am visible not only for my own well-being, but for young people who may not otherwise see a way for themselves in a society divided so strictly into ‘man’ and ‘woman.’ I am visible because I can be, safely, as a result of my privilege — and I am visible in order to make space on a national platform for the voices of trans folks living at the intersection of multiple marginalized identities.”
— Sula Malina, HRC Children, Youth & Families Program Coordinator
Pronouns: they/them/theirs

“For a long time, I hesitated to claim my gender identity because I didn’t feel that I fit a certain narrative of what it meant to be transgender. For me, visibility combats this: if and when we can be visible, we make a multitude of narratives accessible to those in our community and those outside of it. The opportunity to see pieces of your experience of others and to reject the notion of one common narrative, strengthens our community and can expand our understanding of ourselves and the diversity of trans experience.”
— Liam Miranda, HRC Senior Research Manager, Public Education & Research
Pronouns: he/him/his

“Visibility for me means being open about being transgender and not having my co-workers consider firing me or changing their perceptions of my performance. Visibility for me is about being able to educate people about transgender lives and the experiences we live so that cisgender people can better understand us. Visibility is about being a role model for youth and those who are desperate to be themselves. To me, Trans Day of Visibility is about being proud of who you are and reminding the world that transgender people exist, we are diverse and we are beautiful like everyone else.”
— Laya Monarez HRC Membership Outreach Coordinator
Pronouns: she/her/hers

www.hrc.org/blog/trans-day-of-visibility-living-authentically?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

Diana Flynn, UFO, Eric Holder, Sliced Ketchup, Jared Fogle, Unqualified Lesbian: HOT LINKS

Diana Flynn, UFO, Eric Holder, Sliced Ketchup, Jared Fogle, Unqualified Lesbian: HOT LINKS

UFO SIGHTING OF THE DAY. Two pilots, a private Lear jet, and an American Airlines flight, reported the same unidentified object: “Yeah, something just passed over us,” the Airbus pilot reported. “I couldn’t make it out, whether it was a balloon or what … but it had a big reflection on it and it was several thousand feet above us, going the opposite direction.”

HANDMAID’S TALE. The Season 2 trailer is here!

Diana FlynnSHIFTING GEARS. Top lawyer at Justice Department leaving to become litigation director at Lambda Legal: “The departure of Diana Flynn, who has been chief of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division Appellate Section since the ’80s, is the most recent example of legal veterans abandoning their posts since Jeff Sessions became attorney general.”

SEAN PENN ON MADONNA. “Ah, I love my first wife very much.

2020. Former Attorney General Eric Holder says he may run: “If I were going to do it, I would do it because I would think I would have concluded that I could maybe unify the country, because it’s bigger than any one person.”

 

MILWAUKEE. City moves to ban gay conversion therapy. “Both supporters and opponents of the ban packed the council chambers for Tuesday’s emotionally charged debate. Many supporters held rainbow-colored flags. Opponents frequently interrupted aldermen, often shouting warnings suggesting that the ban violates God’s wishes.”

JEFF SESSIONS. Gets the ghoul treatment from TIME.

TIME’s new cover: The trials of Jeff Sessions, featuring an exclusive interview t.co/j9ru5PSEJ7 pic.twitter.com/nBtA8exiML

— TIME (@TIME) March 29, 2018

HELP ME. Subway pitchman and child porn trafficker Jared Fogle pleads for Trump to get him out of prison. “He filed a petition this week for a writ of habeas corpus, which is the Latin term used to describe an official appeal for a prisoner’s release.”

cynthia nixon governorUNQUALIFIED LESBIAN. Cynthia Nixon is now selling pins.

LARRY KING. Repeal the Second Amendment.

NIKOLAS CRUZ. Parkland terrorist flooded with fan mail. “Teenage girls, women and even older men are writing to the Parkland school shooter and sending photographs — some suggestive — tucked inside cute greeting cards and attached to notebook paper with offers of friendship and encouragement. Groupies also are joining Facebook communities to talk about how to help the killer.”

CHICAGO. 146,000 adults identify as LGBT. “A groundbreaking report released Wednesday by the Chicago Department of Public Health (CDPH) indicates Chicago is home to an estimated 146,000 adults who identify as LGBT, representing about 7.5 percent of Chicago’s adult population.”

WEIRD KICKSTARTER OF THE DAY. Sliced ketchup.

GOTCHA OF THE DAY. How Dark Patterns trick you online.

SUPERCUT OF THE DAY. Some of YouTube’s best moments.

SMOKING ANIMAL OF THE DAY. This elephant. “I believe the elephant may have been trying to ingest wood charcoal,” said Dr. Varun Goswami, WCS India scientist and elephant biologist. “She appeared to be picking up pieces from the forest floor, blowing away the ash that came along with it, and consuming the rest.”

THIRSTY THURSDAY. Paul-Marie.

Instagram Photo

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Diana Flynn, UFO, Eric Holder, Sliced Ketchup, Jared Fogle, Unqualified Lesbian: HOT LINKS