Entertainment :: Theatre

Palestine, New Mexico

by Trevor Thomas
EDGE Southwest Editor
Monday Dec 21, 2009
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Kirsten Potter and Russell Means in "Palestine, New Mexico"
Kirsten Potter and Russell Means in "Palestine, New Mexico"  (Source: Craig Schwartz)

"Nobody’s happy here. Nobody knows who they are." So says one character in Richard Montoya’s Palestine, New Mexico now onstage at the Mark Taper Forum.

Amen to that.

Army Captain Catherine Siler (Kirsten Potter) is an unwelcome presence on the New Mexico reservation shared by the Suarez and Birdsong clans. She has come to deliver a letter to the Birdsong chief (Russell Means) from his son Ray Ray who perished during an ambush in Afghanistan.

She immediately runs into trouble as nobody wants her around stirring up trouble. While she’s negotiating her visa with the locals, the captain learns of the ongoing civil war between the two neighboring tribes, occasioned by the fact that the Suarez clan is - get ready for it - Jewish.

Oy.

Despite some absolutely terrific scenic and lighting/projection design (Rachel Hauck and Alexander V. Nichols, respectively) and some well-crafted comic dialogue by Montoya (who also portrays the character Top Hat), Palestine, New Mexico is a muddle.

Montoya attempts to draw parallels between the tribes of New Mexico and the tribes of Afghanistan, between the deserts of the two places, and of course argues for the shared humanity of all mankind (except for Halliburton and Lou Dobbs). These are hardly groundbreaking sentiments, and the one truly original element in this story - Jewish Amerindians - is so tortured it seems, dare one say, patronizing.

Potter is singularly ineffective in her role. Her tiny voice swallowed up by the theater, her movements exaggerated and stagey, her emotions are exponentially too raw and womanly; one categorically rejects the notion that fighting men would have gone into battle under her command.

Means and Montoya do good work onstage, but it is Geraldine Kearns who triumphs as Maria 15, the tribal shaman. Bringing robustness to her role and possessing a compelling stage presence, her natural acting stands out starkly against a backdrop of desultory blocking and self-conscious posturing.

Tribal characters include Bronson (Ric Salinas), Farmer (Herbert Siguenza), Dakotah (Julia Jones) and assorted minor players. Director Lisa Peterson has them glower and menace and look soulfully into the heavens at the sound of the eagle screaming just like real Hollywood Indians. It’s condescending on almost every level.

Marred by predictable sprinklings of progressive platitude and anti-white racism - the salt and pepper of modern ethnocentric drama - Palestine, New Mexico employs a majestic locale and tradition to articulate fairly pedestrian themes. In so doing, the playwright subjects his material to a Procrustean bed of improbability that does not so much stretch the imagination as draw and quarter it.



Performances through January 24 at the Mark Taper Froum, 135 N. Grand Ave, in the Music Center. Tickets online at www.centertheatregroup.org, in person at the box office, or by calling (213) 628-2772.

� Copyright, 2010 by Trevor Thomas. All rights reserved. trevor1331@gmail.com

Comments

  • John F Mann, 2009-12-17 15:07:39

    And what of Palestine?.....some missed connection? ;-).........please fill in that blank

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