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“On Golden Pond” is charming, fresh and funny look at generations.
James Earl Jones and Leslie Uggams shine as the loving, bickering pair.
By Lucy Komisar
Ernest Thompson’s sentimental and acerbic slice of life
about couples and generations is as fresh and funny as it was on Broadway in
1979.
The message is that husbands and wives who love each other
will still bicker, parents will be judgmental and kids resentful. An old story,
but when James Earl Jones is the crotchety, arrogant, self-centered,
over-bearing husband and father and Leslie Uggams the knowing, occasionally
crafty and never subservient wife and mother, it comes out fresh and vigorous.
The play was written for whites, and these actors are
black, but they are as comfortably middle class as the original Norman Thayer, a
retired college professor, and his wife Ethel. Daughter Chelsea (Linda Powell)
could be any 30s professional with a going career but a bad marriage behind her.
Perhaps the only jarring note comes from the remarks Norman makes about Jews. At
first they sound curiously different coming from educated blacks; then you
realize, hey, that’s America.
Norman and Ethel are closing up their long-time Maine
vacation house at end of summer, and Norman is morosely brooding about dying.
It’s the cool, pleasant autumn of the year, but Norman focuses on his
unhappiness about being in the autumn of his years. Ethel would rather enjoy
nature, which represents life. The situation takes a turn with the visit of
Chelsea, who harbors a resentment of her father’s heavy-handed treatment and
feels her mother didn’t stand up for her.
But hard-hearted Norman turns out to be a pushover for
Chelsea’s beau’s pre-teen son, Billy Ray (Alexander Mitchell), played with a
panache that belies his years.
Most people will remember the movie version by Katherine
Hepburn and Henry Fonda, but their ghosts don’t interfere. Jones’s deadpan
delivery is just the right leavening for his bad-tempered character. Uggams is a
charmer; it’s a pleasure to see her give as good as she gets and finally order,
“Get it in gear, Norman.” Under Leonard Foglia’s spirited, clear direction, the
play is never soupy.
Ray Kausen’s design, a cabin with log stairs and rails,
stone fireplace and wood table, overlooks the lake, which alternates in blues
and reds. It’s just the right backdrop to echo the shifts in this family’s
tempers.
"On Golden Pond." Written by Ernest Thompson. Directed by
Leonard Foglia. Starring James Earl Jones, Leslie Uggams, Linda Powell, Peter
Francis James, Craig Bockhorn, Alexander Mitchell.
Cort Theatre, 138 W. 48 St. Tue 7, Wed - Sat at 8pm; Wed &
Sat at 2pm; Sun at 3pm. running time 2:10. $41.25 - $91.25. 212-239-6200; (800)
432-7250.
Images by Joan Marcus.
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