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Jun 21, 2008 10:56

Chris is taking Alfie out once more before we head downtown to the festival.  It promises to be a pleasant day.  Not too hot and the rain has headed somewhere else. The review of the play in the LEO( a weekly entertainment newspaper) has gotten me really excited about seeing it.

Theater Review - ‘Some Men’


(Pandora Productions presents Terrence McNally’s “Some Men” at the Henry Clay Building through June 29. Directed by J. Daniel Herring. Call 216-5502 or visit www.PandoraProds.org.)

During the New York Public Library’s historic 1994 exhibition “Becoming Visible: The Legacy of Stonewall,” one amazed viewer felt compelled to ask, “How did this get here?” In Pandora’s final production of the season, the idea of gay marriage inspires that very question. Terrence McNally’s “Some Men” charts the same history as that groundbreaking presentation in order to demonstrate how society’s tolerance has, indeed, arrived where it is today.

McNally’s script seems a direct descendant of that exhibit. He presents loving portraits of gay life in New York City from nearly every decade of the last century. From the promiscuous to the domesticated, every cliché of gay male identity is thoughtfully exhausted within the play’s chronicles.

The opening scene shows a room of men gathered for a gay wedding. The attendants proceed to tell stories of how gay men have lived, died and endured throughout the 20th century. The actors perform various roles, like Aurion Johnson’s stretch from a Harlem nightclub owner in the early ’30s to a hustler in the late ’60s and finally to a young man involved in a committed gay relationship in 2000.

Michael Drury, Pandora’s artistic director, changes seamlessly from his own collection of gay men from history’s past and triumphs as the angry drag queen Archie who stumbles into the Stonewall Inn of 1969. This scene belongs to Drury and actor Alden Sowder, who plays Joel, a theater queen and avid Judy Garland fan. Set in a dark and seedy bar, it is a deservedly long scene where, together, the two actors boldly lead the rest of the cast through what would become the epicenter of the gay rights movement.

Unfortunately, not every actor makes the dramatic transition from character to character, but many have their moments, like David Lee Smith, who depicts the perfect online prowler. He makes a smooth move from playing the Internet sleazebag into the proudest gay dad ever.

“Some Men” gives a route to gay marriage through an examination of the many facets of the lifestyle - from the closet to the liberation of the civil rights era to the setback of AIDS. Once the map is drawn, it’s easy to see how our older New York couple Scoop and Aaron (played by Drury and Joe Hatfield) would be surprised by how far we’ve come today. For some men, the focus was on being happy in the moment; for others, visibility and equality was a constant battle. Regardless of where one falls on this spectrum, we all helped in getting us here, and McNally’s play serves as a dramatic archive of how that path was trudged. -Joey Yates

pride

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