Red
River Rats
The intense and well designed production of Paul
Gillettes "Red River Rats" catches eight former Vietnam Air Force officers
during a reunion at a bar about 20 years after they had been prisoners of war. With often
gritty, believable performances, nudity and much profanity, the play shows how the war has
defined who these men are. While the brutality and unfairness of the war have become
familiar territory from the numerous plays and films, Gillette nevertheless gives several
new spins.
| "... keeps the audience on edge." |
Rat Donovan (Thom McFadden) has hired
prostitutes Cindy (Catherine Case) and Frankie (Judi Diamond) to enliven the evening, and
the women become the sounding boards for the mens wartime experiences.
The women also reflect the mens adolescent
sexuality, frozen in place by the war. The men often fondly recall the prostitutes from
the period.
The main focus of the reunion, however, is an
unraveling of the mystery of who had cracked under torture and given information to the
enemy, which led to the punishment of two POWs.
- TV actor Jack Scalia makes an auspicious stage debut
as Jungle Graziani, one of the two punished men who has recently discovered who told on
him.
- S.A. Griffin indelibly portrays a character whose
confusion and anger about the war seeps out with a few drinks; Bryan Kent reinforces
peoples image of politicians who can lay chrome on empty phrases.
- Julius Harris gives compassion to his role as a
retired one-star general who has, alone among them, accepted the past and moved on to
other wars.
- Case and Diamond, as the prostitutes, infuse their
characters with a sense of curiosity and anguish.
- McFadden, Tom Wideline, Jack Nance and Bert Kramer
adeptly round out the cast.
Playwright Gillette (who wrote the novel "Play
Misty for Me" that was the source of the Clint Eastwood
film) based the drama on his research into several real "rats." As
uncompromising as the situations and language sometimes are, his affection for the men and
his sensitivity to their trauma is apparent.
... succeeded in making each of the 10 characters unique, and gives
them sure blocking and business that never lapses into chaos, but keeps the audience on
edge.
The lighting by Ivan Spiegel does the job, as does
Brad Morris set.
Christopher Meeks
Daily Variety
Legit Reviews
Wednesday, June 29th, 1994 Back
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