BUFFALO NEWS REVIEW 9/9/09'Twilight' is a
groundbreaking and powerful look at 1992 race riots
THREE
AND A HALF STARS!!!
By Colin Dabkowski BUFFALO NEWS ARTS WRITER
In the spring of 1992, Los Angeles became the epicenter of a social
upheaval.
After a largely white jury acquitted four Los Angeles police officers in
the brutal beating of Rodney King, riots spread through the city like a brush
fire. The city's reaction to the acquittals, in all its violence and
complexity, revealed many of the long-festering injustices that have plagued
America's urban centers for much of the last century.
Before the smoke from the riots had cleared, playwright and actress Anna
Deavere Smith went out into the field with a mission. She had been
commissioned, by the trailblazing Mark Taper Forum, to research, write and
perform a play about the beating, the verdict, the riots and their aftermath.
What she pieced together was "Twilight: Los Angeles, 1992,"
a groundbreaking piece of documentary theater that allowed the victims and
witnesses of the Los Angeles riots to speak loudly and passionately for
themselves. The Subversive Theatre Collective's production of the play,
starring Victoria Perez and directed by Virginia Brannon, opened at the Manny
Fried Playhouse on Friday.
In the tradition of oral historian Studs Terkel, Smith spent countless
hours interviewing a huge variety of subjects, ranging from the former mayor
of Los Angeles to a Korean shop owner who had lost her faith in the American
dream, from the livid black congresswoman Maxine Waters to an optimistic white
truck driver named Reginald Denny.
The stunning breadth, variety and balance of viewpoints Smith uncovered
gives "Twilight" an incredible staying power that brings the
riots into disturbingly sharp focus. Though Smith's work only
scratches the surface of the complex issues of race, class and justice that
motivated the 1992 riots, her play comes closer than any television news
report to revealing something resembling the truth.
And that truth can only sing with the voice of a talented performer, which
Subversive is fortunate to have found in Perez.
Though stifled early on by some enunciation issues and an ongoing series of
roving accents, Perez turns in a generally solid, moving performance that
makes pit stops at every imaginable spot on the emotional spectrum. Her
angry characters, like the fuming Rudy Salas, Sr., or the worked-up race
warrior Paul Parker, are neither overwrought nor underbaked. Her
middle-of-the-road characters, like Los Angeles District Attorney Gil Garcetti
or former Los Angeles Police Commission President Stanley Sheinbaum, have a
touch of caricature about them but make their points nonetheless.
Perez shines brightly in her portrayals of Congresswoman Maxine Waters and
Denny, the white truck driver who was pulled from his cab and beaten at an
intersection in South Central Los Angeles.
Brian Milbrand and Holly Johnson's video segments serve to augment the
narrative by showing audiences the very source material that fomented the
riots. It's as cringe-inducing and uncomfortable as ever to watch the
Rodney King and Reginald Denny beatings, but their inclusion communicates a
harsh and urgent sense of reality that serves to strengthen the play's
visceral impact.
With the reflective power of distance, we can only now begin to gauge the
complexities behind those riots, the 53 lives lost, the countless buildings
burned and the irreparable damage done to a city already deeply entrenched in
racial, ethnic and socioeconomic strife.
Thanks to Subversive, and to Perez, Brannon, Milbrand and Johnson, Buffalo
now has a chance to look into the heart of an uprising that's not entirely
inapplicable to its own identity and struggles..
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