Over
the weekend, I went to see a fantastic new play, which is running
at the Vineyard Theatre on 15th Street: The Fourth Sister, by Janusz
Glowacki. Full disclosure: I’m a friend of the translator, Eva Nagorski, and
I went to a preview, since the official opening isn’t until November 21. So
consider this advance buzz, rather than any kind of official review. But I enjoyed
the play so much I had to write about it.
The play is set in Moscow, in "the present", by which Glowacki means
not some vague idea of post-Communist Russia, but rather a very specific place
and time, with references to Chechnya and George W Bush. It opens with an old
babushka (is there any other kind?) complaining about the fact that she’s being
charged $300 for the removal of her late husband’s body from her second-floor
walk-up. The amount is shocking not only for its size, but also because we’re
used, in the theatre, to shocked reactions to sums which today would be laughably
small. Five pounds! Fifty kopecks! An amount which is actually shocking to us
– in today’s money, in the US – is a rare thing in theatre, and
makes us sit up and take notice. I don’t know whether this play is going to
become obsolete in the future, or whether it’s meant
to, but the fact that it’s so focused on the actual world as it is today,
specifics and all, is refreshing.
The next thing we notice is that there’s an equally refreshing headlong exuberance
to the writing. Scenes rush straight into other scenes, with hours or even days
elided as though they simply didn’t exist. Tania (Alicia Goranson), who is the
centre of the first half of the play, speaks in a beautifully-captured early-adolescent
stream of consciousness, full of strange and wonderful jumps from astonishing
solipsism to penetrating psychological insight. She’s the youngest of three
sisters, all of whom yearn for a romantic ideal we know they will never achieve.
But we’ve come a long way from Chekhov: the buttoned-up manners of Russian country
houses have been replaced by a world filled with gun-toting gangsters and Hollywood
film directors.
Much of the comedy in this play is broad, in a crazy, exaggerated sort of way.
When the gangsters kill the wrong man, they apologise to his mother and make
over-the-top amends. A film of a blatant deception wins an Oscar for Best Documentary.
A lot of people lose limbs, one of them the manager of a circus, whose leg is
eaten by a starved tiger called Pepsi. (Another of the sisters has been taking
half of Pepsi’s meat home, to feed her family.) These are the sort of things
we might be used to finding in the works of Gabriel Garcia Marquez or Salman
Rushdie, but they work just as well on stage.
If one author springs to mind more than anybody else, however, it’s probably
Zadie Smith, another talent who uses her out-of-control imagination to illuminate
lower-middle-class life. And just like White Teeth, The Fourth
Sister rocks about so joyfully that it pretty much collapses at the end.
On the way there, though, there’s a great deal of fun, interwoven with drama
and tragedy. I don’t want to give away too much of the plot, since the twists
are delicious, but suffice to say that it includes defenestration, cross-dressing,
drug deals with warlords, and a newborn baby toting a kalashnikov. (And if that
sounds like it comes straight from a film script by Quentin Tarantino, don’t
worry, Glowacki and the director, Lisa Peterson, are one step ahead of you on
that front, too.)
The acting is excellent, especially from the supporting cast. Rarely will anybody
have relished playing Ganster No. 2 quite as much as in this play, and in return
for some great writing, Glowacki gets some great performances. Goranson is particularly
good in a very difficult role. (And I don’t particularly want to say this, but
if I don’t, you’ll spend half of the beginning of the play wondering why she
looks so familiar: she was Becky in Roseanne. Don’t let that
put you off.)
Ultimately, however, the play is Glowacki’s triumph. Peterson keeps it moving
at a cracking pace, and Nagorski has done a great job, with Glowacki’s help,
in preserving the individuality of the voices. But it is Glowacki who has managed
to take an important and depressing subject, and turn it into a grand and dark
comedy. Go, and
enjoy.
nice like a story