News Ticker

She-She-She

A time shifting fantasia set in Bear Mountain State Park about six women’s lives that was inspired by Eleanor Roosevelt and Pauli Murray’s friendship.

Share your thoughts in the comment section below.

Carrie Heitman, Chad Lindsey, Javan Nelson and Asia Mark in a scene from Hook & Eye Theater’s production of “She-She-She” (Photo credit: Al Foote III)

[avatar user=”Darryl Reilly” size=”96″ align=”left” ] Darryl Reilly, Critic[/avatar]Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt, singing and dancing National Park Service Rangers and six women from the past and present are featured in She-She-She, an amiable, time shifting and rambling play.

Conceived by Carrie Heitman and written by Cynthia Babak it was developed in workshops over the last three years by the Hook & Eye Theater company. According to Chad Lindsey’s director’s note, “I wanted to let the performers create characters and situations that answered some of our creative questions and satisfied their curiosity about themselves and the historical women at the play’s core. What emerged is best described as a rhapsody….”

As well intentioned as their goals are in dramatizing such interesting historical material, their collaboration in concert with cast members is a structurally wayward and dizzying 31 short scenes lasting 90 minutes of varying impact. The finale is quite uplifting but what has come before is often muddled. Ms. Heitman, Ms. Babak and Mr. Lindsey also all appear in the show.

The Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) was a key program of President Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal to rescue the United States during the Great Depression. Unemployed and unmarried men were given jobs renovating 800 parks across the country from 1933 to 1942. Eleanor Roosevelt pressured FDR to create a similar setup for women. This was instituted in 1935 and was affectionately nicknamed the “She She She.”

Pauli Murray (1910–1985) was an African-American lawyer and political activist whose correspondence with Mrs. Roosevelt began in 1940 and led to a friendship that lasted until Roosevelt’s death in 1962. Their relationship is cited by the creators as an inspiration.

The Ensemble in a scene from “She-She-She” (Photo credit: Al Foote III)

The action takes place in New York’s Bear Mountain State Park. In 1935, we meet the unemployed African-American and pregnant Cornelia, Rivka is a Russian immigrant who gave up her daughter for adoption and Maureen from Appalachia who has left a troubled marriage.

Their descendants are visiting the park in 2018. Tria is Cornelia’s great-grand-daughter and is getting a PhD in Women’s Studies. Ani is Rivka’s grand-daughter and has left her job and family as she needs space after cancer surgery. Jolene is Maureen’s great-granddaughter and has been widowed for a year and is on a journey of self-discovery.

These six characters are presented in various permutations with the two time periods bisecting. Several rangers and other incidental characters also appear.  There’s a lot going on and many of the details in this review were gleaned from reading the script’s list of characters as it’s not that clear who’s who from actually watching the show.

In addition to Babak, Heitman and Lindsey the spirited cast also includes Emily Kunkel, Elizabeth London, Asia Mark, Nylda Ria Mark, Javan Nelson, and Jeremy Rafal. They’re all perky in several song and dance numbers.

Lindsey’s direction has energy, confidence and a strong visual sense that infuses the production with force but cannot compensate for some superficial and extraneous sequences such as a character being in a video game displayed as a production number.

Nylda Ria Mark and Asia Mark in a scene from “She-She-She” (Photo credit: Al Foote III)

A marvelous simple backdrop of trees dominates Patrick J. Burlingham’s neat scenic design that has benches, minimal furniture and a two-part platform that breaks away and gets reassembled to depict various locations. Mr. Burlingham’s creativity allows for everything to flow fluidly.

Alejandro Fajardo’s adeptly varying lighting design perfectly accentuates the dimensions of differing eras. Traffic, trains, nature and other effects are all realistically crafted by sound designer Nok Kanchanabanka.

Contemporary wear, 1930’s rustic fashions, and ranger uniforms as well as a Rosie The Riveter kerchief are all on display in Krista Intranuovo’s fine costume design. Most striking is a wild boar outfit for one of the wackier scenes.

She-She-She’s historical details, many back stories and numerous incidents are crammed together into an intermittently appealing but ultimately unsatisfying work.

She-She-She (through June 2, 2018)

Hook & Eye Theater

The Mark O’Donnell Theater at The Actors Fund Arts Center

160 Schermerhorn Street, in Brooklyn

For tickets, visit http://www.hookandeyetheater.com

Running time: 90 minutes with no intermission

Share your thoughts in the comment section below.

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published.




This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.