THEATRE

“The Member of the Wedding” at 1st Stage is Thoroughly Engaging

By Sara Dudley Brown, Theatre Reviewer

.(l to r) Deidra LaWan Starnes, William Carroccio and Zoe Walpole in “Member of the Wedding” at 1st Stage. The show runs through June 2 in Tysons Corner. Photo by Ryan Maxwell Photography.

They had me at the set…a perfect rendering of what I imagine a kitchen was like in 1945 in rural Georgia, complete with a refrigerator in the color and exact state of repair you would expect in homes back then, as well as the linoleum floor, the muslin (or maybe even flour sack) curtains covering the open cabinets, and recognizable old labels on cans. Kudos to props designer, Felysia Furnary. All very familiar to this southern girl. And no, I don’t want to discuss my age, but yes, I do remember many homes with similar décor, so I can attest that Jonathan Dahm Robertson’s set design is brilliantly right on. I must also mention the detail of the lattice work covering the lower edges of the home, complete with weeds pushing through. Oh, dear. Memories.

Zoe Walpole in “Member of the Wedding” at 1st Stage. Photo by Teresa Castracane.

But when 12-year-old Frankie Addams (Zoe Walpole) bursts onto that set like a lanky young deer, all long arms and legs and looking a little like a young Audrey Hepburn, the stage comes alive! Gradually we begin to feel her rage and her disconnect from her ‘family” of a widowed shopkeeper father (Michael Crowley) who ignores her, and Bernice (Deidra LaWan Starnes), the black housekeeper who obviously loves Frankie and is trying her best to raise her. Bernice also has daytime charge of Frankie’s 6-year-old cousin John Henry (William Carroccio and S. Gabriel Mackenna alternating in the role). Frankie apparently has for some time been suffering pubescent angst and yearnings, as well as a disconnected feeling that she belongs to no larger group than her small family, but has no words to express her unease. However, when her big brother Jarvis (Jonathan Helwig) comes home to marry his sweetheart, Janice (Caroline Dubberly), Frankie sees a way out of this hot, boring town and dreams of running away with them to Alaska to make “the we of me.”

Deidre LaWan Starnes in “Member of the Wedding” at 1st Stage. The show runs through June 2 in Tysons Corner. Photo by Teresa Castracane.

Bernice (the housekeeper) over the course of the production reveals a powerhouse of emotions and steals our hearts and the show while doing so. We deeply feel her love, concern, and sadness from years of negotiating life in the prejudiced deep south as well as harboring unexpectedly loving recollections of her first husband. Starnes’s performance is nuanced, powerful, and totally unforgettable. And when she and Frankie interact in that kitchen and out on the scorching hot porch you are IN the l940’s of the Deep South.

.(l to r) Michael Crowley, Zoe Walpole, Jonathan Helwig, S. Gabriel Mackenna and Caroline Dubberly in “Member of the Wedding” at 1st Stage. Photo by Teresa Castracane.

Carson McCullers’ 1950 stage version of her novel written in 1946 is lovingly directed by Cara Gabriel in concert with a perfectly cast ensemble including Rebecca Ballinger (Mrs. West), Dylan Fleming (T.T. Williams), and Jonathan Del Palmer (Honey Camden Brown). The brilliant lighting designer (Jason Arnold) and sound designer (Neil McFaddan) create wonderful special effects, including an amazing storm and showcase a terrific bluesy trumpet and an annoying piano being tuned.

 

(l to r) William Carroccio, Jonathan Del Palmer, Dylan J. Fleming and Zoe Walpole in “Member of the Wedding” at 1st Stage. Photo by Ryan Maxwell Photography.

Can’t believe I haven’t yet mentioned the costumes by Kim Sivigny which perfectly evoke the period—the fabrics limp from the heat with the pale, nondescript colors of those years. Perfection! And the dialect coach, Jane Margulies Kalbfeld, also deserves kudos for the non-dialects and the cast’s lovely, soft southern accents. Thank you.

This production and the performances I just described seem almost effortless, soft, and evocative of a time and place very few people remember any more. It is totally worthwhile spending some time in the company of these interesting characters. I highly recommend seeing and experiencing “The Member of the Wedding”.

Performance and Ticket Information: “The Member of the Wedding” runs through June 2, 2019, and is approximately 2 hours long with one 15 minute intermission. 1st Stage is located at 1524 Spring Hill Road, Tysons, VA 22102. Tickets can be purchased online at www.1ststage.org or by calling the 1st Stage Box Office at 703-854-1856.

Sara Dudley Brown

Sara Dudley Brown is the Theatre Editor of The Zebra Press. She graduated with a music degree in voice from Rollins College Conservatory of Music in Winter Park Florida. After several years of professional singing and acting (Disney World and The Kenley Theatres as well as voice-over and film here in the DMV area), trying and failing miserably at being Barbra Streisand (the post was already filled), Sara decided to take her lifelong love of music and the theatre to create a profession which would use everything she had learned theatrically and musically over the years—corporate event production and management. She began with department store events, working for the May Company putting on events in 18 stores, and went on to found her own corporate event management company. She recently retired after 30 years of mounting mega events internationally and domestically for some of the world’s top aviation manufacturers. Now Sara is once again using her years of theatrical work as well as her musical training to review Metro Area professional theatre productions for The Zebra Press. She thinks this is a much more sane way to live and never tires of the excitement of a theatre opening!

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