Showing posts with label Mint Theater Company. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mint Theater Company. Show all posts

06 September 2018

'Days to Come'


I haven’t been a fan of the Mint Theater Company since I first saw one of their productions a good many years ago.  (The earliest one for which I have a report was 2003’s Far and Wide by Arthur Schnitzler.)  Their productions were well enough presented—decent acting, good tech, even competent directing—but I never found their selection of scripts worth spending a couple of hours on.  The Mint’s mission is to find and produce “worthwhile plays from the past that have been lost or forgotten.”  Here’s the problem I have with that pursuit, as I observed in a report on another Mint production (N. C. Hunter’s A Day by the Sea, 1953, posted on Rick On Theater on 17 September 2016; this report also includes a brief profile of the Mint Theater): “My sense about plays that have been forgotten or neglected has always been—and I’ve seldom been proved wrong—that most have been so for an excellent reason: they’re not very good.”  

As a result of my poor experiences, I’ve avoided the Mint for the most part.  Every now and then, however, something comes along that seems an interesting bit of (perhaps minor) theater history that I’m tempted to check out.  So, when I got a mailing in July announcing that the Mint would be presenting a 1936 Lillian Hellman play, her second after her début hit, The Children’s Hour (1934; 691 performances and a 1961 movie starring  Audrey Hepburn and Shirley MacLaine), I was intrigued enough to put aside my trepidations about my track record with Mint.  I asked Diana, my frequent theater partner, if Days to Come interested her—despite its rather daunting track record (it closed after only seven performances on Broadway in December ’36), and she said she was, so I booked seats for the 7:30 performance on the evening of Friday, 31 August, and we met at the Samuel Beckett Theatre on Theatre Row.  

The 1936 première of Days to Come opened on 15 December at the Vanderbilt Theatre on 48th Street, east of Broadway, and closed on 19 December.  (The theater no longer exists, having been razed in 1954 for a parking structure.)  The production was produced and directed by Herman Shumlin, but the cast contained no names I recognized.  (William Harrigan played Andrew Rodman and Florence Eldridge was his wife, Julie; these were stars of the day—Harrigan’s father was Ned Harrigan of Harrigan & Hart—but unknown to me.)  Brooks Atkinson of the New York Times wrote that Days to Come

is a bitter play, shot through with hatred and written with considerable heat.  It is also one of the most elusive the season has set on the stage.  For the topic of labor troubles is apparently one [Hellman] has not mastered yet.  Although “Days to Come” is laboriously written and acted with dogged determination, it never once comes firmly to grips with any of the subjects it nudges in passing.  

The Times reviewer concluded: “Making a spiritual tragedy out of a labor impasse is something Miss Hellman is not able to do.  ‘Days to Come’ is fairly tortured by the effort of trying.”  (I did warn Diana of the reception of the play in ’36.)  

The 1978 Off-Off-Broadway revival at the WPA Theater (also now defunct) in what’s now called the Flatiron District fared better, though: Terry Curtis Fox of the Village Voice dubbed the play “very much worth seeing,” affirming that it “appears in retrospect to be a warm-up for her first masterpiece, The Little Foxes [1939].”  Fox reported that “the writing is far more compelling and less explanatory than in her first play” and he found that Days “emerges as a far more interesting work than Children’s Hour.”  (The production ran in October and November 1978 under the direction of R. Stuart White; Reno Roop played Andrew Rodman and Kaiulani Lee was his wife, Julie.)  

The play is published in several editions (some no longer in print), but after the Broadway flop, Hellman slightly revised the script for a 1971 release (Collected Plays; Little, Brown and Company), condensing the original three acts into two.  This is the text the WPA used for the 1978 OOB revival, and it’s the script the Mint is using for the current production.  We’ll see soon where I come down on this 2018 revival.

Born in New Orleans, Hellman (1905-84) was raised in a Southern Jewish family.  Her father was a traveling shoe salesman (a biographical fact Hellman shared with Tennessee Williams coincidentally), and her family moved between New Orleans and New York City.  Attending New York University for two years and then taking some classes at Columbia University, Hellman worked at several literary jobs: reading manuscripts for the publisher Boni and Liveright and screenplays for MGM (another life fact also on Williams’s resumé).  While at MGM, Hellman met detective writer Dashiell Hammett (1894-1961) and they began a decades-long romance.  

In 1932, Hellman returned to New York with Hammett (whom she never married but with whom she remained romantically involved until his 1961 death) and began working as a script-reader for Broadway producer and director Herman Shumlin (who would stage the ill-fated Broadway premiére of Days to Come).  The tyro playwright showed Shumlin (1898-1979) a draft of The Children’s Hour, her first play to be staged in New York.  He produced and directed it on Broadway, where it opened on 20 November 1934—Hellman was not yet 30—and ran for 691 performances.

The young dramatist immediately became one of Broadway’s bright lights, but then came Days, the failure of which upset Hellman so much she literally threw up backstage on opening night and didn’t look again at the script for 35 years.  She came back with The Little Foxes (410 performances, produced and directed by Shumlin) and Watch on the Rhine (1941; 378 performances, produced and directed by Shumlin), The Autumn Garden (1951; 101 performances, produced by Kermit Bloomgarden and directed by Harold Clurman), Toys in the Attic (1960; 456 performances, produced by Bloomgarden and directed by Arthur Penn), and the book of the 1956 Leonard Bernstein musical Candide (73 performances, directed by Tyrone Guthrie). 

Starting in the 1930s, Hellman was a pretty committed socialist and leftist radical.  She famously defended her principles in 1952 when she was haled before the House Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC) during the communist witch-hunts and refused to name names: “I cannot and will not cut my conscience to fit this year’s fashions.”  She was blacklisted in Hollywood, like her lover, Dashiell Hammett, and couldn’t work there until 1966.  

Hellman published a bestselling series of memoirs, including An Unfinished Woman (1969) and Pentimento (1973), whose veracity was later called into question.  The books inspired the 1977 film Julia starring Jane Fonda as Hellman.  When novelist Mary McCarthy (1912-89) accused Hellman of being a “dishonest writer” the playwright famously sued her for libel in 1980.  She died on Martha’s Vineyard on June 30, 1984, the lawsuit terminated unadjudicated. Many of her plays are often and popularly revived, the roles coveted by actresses across the country and abroad,  and she is the namesake of the Lilly Awards, founded by playwrights Julia Jordan, Marsha Norman, and Theresa Rebeck in 2010 to honor women in theater .

The plot—or plots—of Days to Come is a bit of a tangled web.  (We’ll see why shortly.  Hellman herself, in the introduction to the 1942 publication of the text, acknowledged, “I wanted to say too much.”)  I’ll try to keep it simple for now: Andrew Rodman (Larry Bull) is the hereditary owner of a brush factory in Callom, Ohio, a fictional small-town somewhere between Cleveland and Cincinnati.  It’s a company town and all the residents of Callom depend on the brush factory for their livelihoods and the company depends on the town for its labor.  Everything in this symbiosis has been working fine for three generations and everyone, the owners and the workers, all consider each other friends.  Until . . . 

The Great Depression (1929-39) has taken a toll.  (I read a statistic that unemployment in Cleveland was 50%; in Toledo, it reached 80%!)  The company’s bleeding red ink and Rodman, who’s mortgaged to the hilt—the family house, the factory, and maybe soon, his soul—to keep himself, his family, and the business afloat, won’t make a cheaper product or raise his prices to bring in more income.  He’s instigated a 10-cent pay cut at the factory and the brush workers have gone out on strike in response, so no one’s earning anything.  Talking hasn’t moved the needle, so Henry Ellicott (Ted Deasy), Rodman’s lawyer, best friend from childhood, and his biggest creditor (and, apparently, his wife’s lover), convinces the brush-maker to hire someone who can resolve the problem.  

Naïve Rodman thinks Sam Wilkie (Dan Daily) and his “52 or 53” men are professional brush workers who’ll get the production line going again (i.e., scabs—but that issue isn’t addressed).  Of course, everyone else on stage and in the audience knows before they even show up that they’re strike-breakers; Mossie Dowel (Geoffrey Allen Murphy) and Joe Easter (Evan Zes), who are staying in the Rodman house as “security” for the factory owners, are unmistakably a couple of thugs: Joe likes to pull a knife at the slightest provocation (or even no provocation); if they dragged their knuckles on the floor, it couldn’t be more obvious.  (At least  one reviewer saw the hand of Dashiell Hammet, who’d done a turn as a Pinkerton man one of who’s assignments was strike-breaking, in the characters of the strike-breakers.)

Rodman’s got a conscience and is concerned about his workers—he’s grown up with them, gone to school with them, visited them in their homes, and considers many of them his friends and vice versa—and as it dawns on him whom he’s hired and for what, he starts to waffle.  But he’s a weakling and can’t take any action one way or the other.  His sister, Cora (Mary Bacon), who lives in the house with him and his wife, is so self-centered and oblivious, she sees all this turmoil as a bother aimed at discomfiting her and her comfy routine.  She thinks Wilkie and his men should do whatever is necessary to get the town back in order, with the social order intact.  Ellicott not only agrees, but is Wilkie’s biggest supporter in Callom.  

On the other side is Thomas Firth (Chris Henry Coffey), one of the factory workers who’s always seen Rodman as his friend as well as his employer—but now he can’t look after his wife and adopted daughter.  Arrived in Callom to help organize the strike is young Leo Whalen (Roderick Hill), a sincere and honest union man who cautions hot-tempered Firth and the other workers not to fight the strike-breakers because that’s exactly what Wilkie (of whom he’s been a frequent adversary) wants.  Wilkie’s gotten some of his thugs sworn in as police officers and they’re ready to swoop down on the strikers as soon as a fist is swung.  Rodman’s wife, Julie (Janie Brookshire), as naïve and confused as her husband—not to mention a little lonely—is intrigued with, and not a little attracted to, Whalen (who, in Hill’s portrayal, couldn’t look more all-American and steadfast).  She’s the monkey wrench about to fall into the works.  

Early in the play, Joe, the goon who likes to play with knives, gets into a meaningless dispute with Mossie (who’s always cracking his knuckles, which irks Joe no end) and throws a knife at him, killing him.  This takes place in the living room of the Rodmans, and Wilkie, instead of calling the cops, orders Joe to take Mossie’s body out and lose it.  Ultimately, he’s dumped in the alley outside strike headquarters and Whalen is blamed for the murder.  Except that Julie had been visiting Whalen in the strike office when the car with the body makes its deposit and roars off.  

(I’m sure it’s unintentional on the parts of either director J. R. Sullivan or Hill, but at one moment in the strike office scene, Whalen stands on a chair, a hammer in his right hand and his arm thrust into the air.  The pose he strikes evokes the many heroic workers in Soviet propaganda posters of the 1930s and ’40s.  On second thought, though, it wasn’t really an organic move on Hill’s part—it’s a set-piece—so maybe it’s premeditated after all.)

Whalen is nevertheless arrested and held long enough to keep him away from the striking workers so that, without the organizer being around to wrangle them, they lose control under  the strike-breakers’ constant baiting and a street brawl breaks out during which Firth’s young daughter is killed by a blow to her head from the truncheon of one of Wilkie’s enforcers.  In his own eyes, this makes Rodman a murderer and he’s informed by Firth that he’s no longer safe in downtown Callom.  The strike is broken, but Rodman has lost his friends and his town, and all but lost his business. 

In the last scene, after having sent Wilkie and his crew packing, Rodman confronts Cora, Julie, and Ellicott, and all the family resentments and secrets come tumbling out in a tornado of confessional and recriminational speeches.  Rodman has now lost his family as well.  It’s a scorched-earth ending.

The worst offense of Days to Come is that it’s boring.  It’s earnest and sincere—and hasn’t a single beat in its earnest and sincere little heart!  The reason, I think—and this is my own guess—is that the subject, labor trouble and strike-breaking in a company town, isn’t something with which Hellman was at all personally acquainted.  She did a lot of research, spending two months, according to Mint’s dramaturgical advisor, in the small Ohio towns between Cincinnati and Cleveland, focusing on Wooster, Ohio, a town of about 11,000 in 1930 located 50 miles south of Cleveland; it was home to the Wooster Brush Company founded in 1851 by Adam Foss.  The playwright interviewed factory workers, owners, townspeople, officials, and so on—but she didn’t know any of those people and she wasn’t personally invested in any of them.  Intellectually, yes; politically, sure—but not personally.  None of the characters is human, so none is sympathetic.

Hellman also wasn’t sure in the end what she was writing, a Waiting for Lefty labor drama or a Virginia Woolf/Delicate Balance (or Little Foxes) family melodrama.  Three quarters of the play is the former, all contrived circumstances to make a labor conflict, with stock characters from that kind of story; the final quarter is the latter, and all speeches and monologues shouted at each other by the four family members.  It pretty much comes out of nowhere, too.  (The Village Voice said of the 1978 Off-Off-Broadway revival that it seemed to be a prep for Little Foxes; I suspect this scene is what the reviewer was responding to.  If you want to check me out, see my report on that play, posted on 13 May 2017.)  In a New York Herald Tribune interview a few days before the Broadway première, Hellman said, “It’s the family I’m interested in principally; the strike and social manifestations are just backgrounds,” but what’s on stage looks more like she tacked this focus on as an afterthought rather than the main interest.

Despite ending the labor plot before getting to the family intrigue, nothing is really resolved, either.  Some terrible things happen during the strike-breaking plot, but it’s all just swept away to clear the decks for the last scene.  (Effectively, Rodman just sends everyone home.  This ends the labor plot, but doesn’t conclude it.)  Then, after 20 minutes or so of everyone yelling recriminations at everyone else, the family mess also just ends without resolving anything.  I was left wondering how any of these people could go on living, especially in the same small town, after the events of the play, both the labor conflict and the family drama.  Brooks Atkinson in 1936 said that the play “never once comes firmly to grips with any of the subjects it nudges in passing.”  This seems to be what he meant.

I also had a particular problem with one character, but I don’t know if it’s the playwright’s fault, the actor’s, or the director’s.  It’s probably all three.  I’m talking about Cora Rodman, Andrew’s sister.  For most of the play, Bacon plays her as a silly fool, a sort of Betty Boop in a serious situation—all fluttering arms and hands and little-girl voice.  She always seemed to be in a different play from her castmates.  Then at the end, she turns serious and fierce—still way off base, but now more scary, the kind of woman who’d defend the Nazis in the months to come for stabilizing Germany and taking those nasty outsiders in hand.  (Bacon’s physical behavior was still a flibbertigibbet, which struck me as incongruous.)  Cora’s split personality was emblematic of the play itself.  (A couple of reviewers were of the opinion that Hellman separated the two aspects of Cora’s personality into the more dramatically satisfying Regina Giddens and Birdie Hubbard of Little Foxes.)

To determine if, like Jessica Rabbit, Cora was just drawn this way, or if it’s an invention of the actor or director, or both in collusion—or all three, I’d have had to have been a fly on the wall in the rehearsal room.  All the other characters and performers are straightforward and direct, though they’re all clichés to one extent or another and none of the actors found a way out of that cul-de-sac.  Director Sullivan didn’t help them, either.  (The Mint doesn’t seem to have a policy of “fixing” the oldies they mount—though they did cut Schnitzler’s Das weite Land from four hours to 2½ and from 29+ characters to 11 for Far and Wide—which may be honorable or it may be foolish.)  As a result, though there isn’t anything technically wrong with any of the performances, none is engaging or moving.  It’s more like a social studies role-play than a stage drama.  

I’ll say much the same thing about the Mint’s physical production for Days.  Andrea Varga’s mid-West Depression-era costumes are fine, all looking exactly like what Hellman’s types should be wearing; Joshua Yocom’s furniture and set decorations (this is a very proppy show) all look like what a wealthy Ohio factory-owner would have in his home.  (I’m always amazed at how much Art Deco stuff can still be found around—although some of it might be revivalist reproductions.  And how come Rodman’s father in the portrait over the sideboard looks like Anton Chekhov without his pince-nez?  Is that a dog-whistle to Hellman or something?)  Jane Shaw’s sound design, which produces a very realistic rainstorm and the frightening sounds of off-stage violence from the workers’ confrontation with the strike-breakers, also includes jazz-era music between the scenes and during intermission to help establish and maintain the period feeling.  

Harry Feiner’s set design, which consists principally of the living room of the Rodman house with a brief visit to the storefront office of strike headquarters, also looks appropriate as well as practical, with a small desk for Rodman at the stage-right side of the living room, and large French doors leading to a garden upstage.  The problem isn’t with the look, or even the space left for the actors (sometimes four or five in a scene) on the small Beckett stage, but the lack of facility for changing the sets for the many scenes (there are five in the two acts).  Now, only two set-changes are also changes of location (from the Rodman living room to the strike office and back again), and that necessitates a small set to fold out at stage left and fold back in, but all the other scene-changes require the manual resetting of numerous props, all by the stage crew (and a few of the actors) each time.  All of this takes time, slowing the already sluggish production to a virtual standstill.  (The two-hour production might have come down to 1:45 or even less without the time-consuming scene shifts.)  

The cause of this, I assume, is that the Beckett doesn’t have the technical capacity for quick scene-changes—no fly-space and inadequate wings—in which case, Sullivan and Feiner ought to have devised a production that doesn’t need this facility.  (The 99-seat Beckett with its 34'-by-24' stage is Mint’s home theater these days; they know by now what it can handle and what it can’t.)

I’ve said pretty much all I need to about Sullivan’s staging.  He handles the production adequately, given the script, but doesn’t enhance its appeal or solve its textual deficiencies.  Everything that’s wring with Days to Come shows up on stage.  I will compliment fight director Rod Kinter, though, for one of the best bits of stage violence I’ve ever seen—the knifing of Mossie.  However meaningless the act itself is, it’s executed excellently.  Whatever Kinter devised, actors Zes (who threw) and Murphy (who “caught”) performed it perfectly.  

On the basis of 27 published reviews, Show-Score gave Days to Come a low average rating of 61 (as of 2 September).  Thirty-three percent of the notices were positive, a relatively low tally; 45% of the reviews were mixed and 22% were negative.  The highest score in the website was only 85, shared by four on-line notices (The Clyde Fitch Report, Show Showdown, More Than The Play Blog, Broadway Journal), followed by one 80 (Stage Left); Show-Score’s lowest-rated reviews were two 40’s (Village Voice, New York Stage Review) backed up by three 45’s (Broadway Blog, New York Times, Woman Around Town).  My survey will comprise 17 reviews.

(The press turn-out was very light.  The Times was the only daily paper to review Days and the now-defunct Village Voice was the only other newspaper to cover the show.  The New Yorker was the only other print outlet to run a review; all the rest were on-line review sites.)

In the Times (which received the second-lowest Show-Score rating of 45), Laura Collins-Hughes dubbed Days to Come a “sprawling, centerless” and “overloaded play.”  She asserted that “there is more life in it than the Mint staging finds” in its “mishmash of acting styles in a tonally uneven production that rarely wipes the dust of decades from the text.” Collins-Hughes continued, “The odd thing is the abstractness of [Hellman's] perspective,” observing, “We meet just a single worker, Andrew’s old friend Thomas Firth . . ., and we never do get much sense of the town that’s so dear to Andrew.”  Singling out four of the main cast members, the Times reviewer felt that the actors are “hamstrung by a performance style straight out of period movies.”  Of the script, Collins-Hughes suggested, “Opened up on the screen, it might have blossomed.  Onstage in this revival, it simply wilts.”

In what was one of the Village Voice’s last theater notices (the paper ceased publication on 31 August; the Days review came out on the 28th), Miichael Sommers, referring to the play’s “debacle” of a première 80 years ago, declared, “For some inexplicable reason, Days to Come has been dug up by the Mint Theater Company” and affirmed that “this stiff deserves to remain buried,” adding, “Nor is the production up to the Mint’s typical standard.”  (Sommers’s review received one of Show-Score’s two 40’s, the production’s lowest score.)  The Voice writer explained that “the drama’s components of outside agitations and indoor intrigues do not hold together.  In her efforts to explore and meld both social issues and personal messes, Hellman satisfies neither the larger nor the intimate sides of the story.”  Sommers complained that Hellman’s “writing is curiously lacking” and that Sullivan directs “somewhat stiffly,” adding, “The acting is also uneven.”  “Constrained by the underwritten quality of their characters,” Sommers felt that some of the actors give “wan portrayals.”

In the New Yorker’s “Goings On About Town” column, Ken Marks labeled the Mint revival of Days “worthy,” which, directed with a “fine” cast, “stands on its own.”  Marks characterized the play as “a gripping, lucid examination of the dangerous intersection of economic, social, and personal forces, even though, with the entrance of the strikebreakers, the action turns pulpy for a stretch, like a Jimmy Cagney movie.”

On the Broadway Journal (which earned the play’s highest rating on Show-Score, one of four 85’s), James Feinberg insisted that the fault for Days to Come’s failure in 1939 “certainly wasn’t the writing.”  Characterizing the Mint’s revival as “well-acted” and “smoothly directed,” Feinberg labeled it “a fascinating family drama” which “makes a compelling case for the play’s continued relevance.”  The Broadway Journalist offered his interpretation:


The play’s applicability to today’s political situation, therefore, works by contrast: In the Trump era, when every individual act is seen as either resistance or implicit support, the personal is the political; in Days To Come, the political is the personal.

“The great success of this crisp production is the sympathy it engenders for its somewhat hapless characters,” asserted Feinberg, “largely . . . because Sullivan allows the interpersonal drama to bleed through the social commentary.”  In the end, the reviewer found, “Days to Come poses big questions to which its characters do not know the answers, and perhaps never will.”  

Robert Russo of Stage Left (which received an 80 rating from Show-Score) described the play as “[f]reely flowing across categories and genres” and found the revival a “finely-acted production.”  He understood why the play may have “confused” audiences in ’36, observing that it “vacillates between melodramatic, realistic, and hard-boiled qualities” while it “ambitiously—and quite successfully—captures both the local and global scene of its conflict, tying the interpersonal struggles of boss and worker with family, community, and country.”  Russo felt that “while the small-town vision of worker and boss as friends seems more and more remote with each passing year, the labor dynamics on display throughout the play . . . are familiar, and deeply relevant.”  He found the theme “an essential, exciting, and refreshing conflict to see on stage and ruminate upon afterward.”  

Stanford Friedman described the Mint revival of Days as “earnest” on Front Row Center (he posted the same notice on New York Theatre Guide) in which the director and company “breathe new life into” what he noted had been “a clunker” in 1936.  Friedman reported that the presentation, “boasting top notch production values and veteran actors, . . . is highly watchable, if not highly relatable” despite “many familiar elements in the mix.”  The FRC reviewer affirmed that “the melodramatic turns and existential crises of the night ultimately keep us at a distance.”  In the end, Friedman acknowledged that “the collective weight of everyone’s personal problems overshadow the play’s two murders and overwhelm its labor strife subplot.”

Broadway World’s Michael Dale mused that “if Clifford Odets’ landmark pro-union drama, WAITING FOR LEFTY, hadn’t opened the year before, . . . DAYS TO COME . . . might have been better received” (though I doubt it).  Dale reported that the “very fine production is played out on a splendid set,” but concluded, “Alternating between family drama and Depression-era labor issues, DAYS TO COME, serves neither satisfactorily, but it’s still a worthy venture for the Mint, and an intriguing curiosity for audiences.”  Mark Dundas Wood on Stage Buddy felt that the Mint’s Days was played “briskly” and that director Sullivan “presents a sharp and smart little play.”  Wood observed, “There’s something appealingly noir-ish in Days—especially in one sexually charged scene between” labor organizer Whalen and Julie Rodman, but the “cast is uneven.”  He reported that the play was “originally under-esteemed, but, unfortunately, [is] no long-dormant masterwork.”  

On TheaterMania, Zachary Stewart called Days “[w]ell-staged and smartly acted” but cautioned that “it still leaves us underwhelmed by a script that bites off more than it can chew.”  Emphasizing that the play “isn’t just the story of laboring Davids versus a capitalist Goliath,” Stewart asserted, “Hellman thrillingly eschews simplistic agitprop, fully humanizing her characters.”  The TM reviewer, however, observed that the play’s “expansive scope” is “a lot to pack into two hours”  and “is . . . the play’s undoing.”  He continued, “Not only does it dilute focus, but the linguistic labor and dramatic contrivance required to set up all of Hellman’s dominoes ensures a long and often painfully dull process before they can be knocked down.”  On the other hand, Stewart asserted, “This middling dramatization of an extraordinary concept is given a top-notch production.”  In the end, the review-writer found, “Unfortunately, Days to Come is neither as funny or tragic as it has the potential to be.”

Jonathan Mandell, noting on New York Theater the failure of Days to Come on Broadway, warned that the revival “doesn’t make a convincing case that the initial audience was shortsighted, nor that the play was somehow before its time” despite “the company’s usual fine acting and first-rate production values.”  Some scenes “should play more humorously than they do,” and the play ends “with an abrupt and contrived convergence of the disparate conflicts,” giving “short-shrift to” all of them.  Mandell summed up his view of Days by stating:


Some have argued that Hellman’s divided focus in “Days to Come” is meant to show us the connection between private morality and public policy.  This sounds right to me.  Indeed, for all its structural flaws, the play is replete with issues that still resonate, in one form or another.  While witnessing the dilemma between the two old friends in a small Ohio town, the factory owner and the worker, I couldn’t help thinking about how our current day political polarization has threatened the relationships of old friends and family, in Ohio, and everywhere else.

On Theatre Reviews Limited, David Roberts observed that while the labor plot of Days is “unremarkable,” the play has a “more dynamic storyline driven by Hellman’s complex characters and their authentic, relevant conflicts.”  Roberts found, “Betrayal, criminality, deceit, murder, gluttony, and prevarication abound, and these are the themes that resonate with the current socio-political environment,” but also felt, “The important themes of Lillian Hellman’s play and the rich, enduring questions it raises are unfortunately overshadowed by the production.”  He explained that “the performances are weak, and the direction seems uneven.”  He wondered, “Why most of the characters become caricatures is puzzling and problematic” when the cast is “fully capable of delivering engaging and believable performances.”  “Moral strength battles moral depravity in” Days to Come, declared the TRL reviewer, but lamented, “That battle of the Titans gets lost in the Mint Theater production . . . and . . . falls flat.”  

CurtainUp’s Elyse Sommer pronounced the Mint’s revival of Days a “handsomely staged production” that leads to a “melodramatic and somber denouement.”  Sommer, however, complained that Hellman “complicates the plot with too many issues, and fails to have the characters connect believably and smoothly.”  She affirmed, “And that hasn’t changed in this revival.”  Of the stage work, the CU reviewer found, “Director J. R. Sullivan works hard, but not often enough successfully so, to weave all these plot strands together and help the actors clarify what makes them tick.  But a cast just one short of a full dozen and this wide ranging story make it hard for them to make strong impressions.”  

Victor Gluck of TheaterScene.net labeled Days to Come an “overheated drama” that’s “all over the place with each character offering a new plot line.”  He explained, “It is not so much that the play is unfocused but that there are too many stories” because, despite the time Hellman took to develop it, “the play still seems to have a great deal of  undigested material.”  Furthermore, Gluck found that “Sullivan has been unable to decide on the tone or style of the play so that some actors seem miscast and others misdirected.”  In the end, Gluck wrote, “Days to Come is an example of a worthy, lost play whose problems haven’t yet been solved—if they ever will.”

Despite the fact that Days to Come “is filled with social and political significance that might have had more impact and make more of a statement in the current climate,” on Theater Pizzazz, Sandi Durell observed that “it spends too much time on the intricacies of the family and too little time on the plight of the working class.”  In addition, the TP reviewer found that “J. R. Sullivan does a brilliant job directing, but even he can’t undo the long-winded repetitive conversations, and many times slow moving rhetoric . . . of a very poorly written play with some good and not so good performances,” dubbing the revival a “valiant effort.”  

In the second of three reviews receiving Show-Score’s second-lowest rating (45), Samuel L. Leiter of Broadway Blog noted that Hellman passed the blame around for the play’s 1936 failure, including “production issues,” but the Broadway Blogger noted that “technical problems aren’t notable in the play’s physically attractive new revival.”  He added, “But the acting and directing would surely make Hellman’s enemies list.”  Calling the performances “skin-deep,” Leiter said the “dull, conventional acting” didn’t dig “deeply enough to strike a more than a one-dimensional note.”  Labeling the revival “stodgy, lethargic,” he declared that it “falls far short.”  “Spottily cast,” Leiter continued, “the production is splattered with awkward blocking.”  Quoting John Anderson’s 1936 review in the New York Journal-American, the review-writer reported that director Sullivan’s mounting is “muddled and incoherent, dreary, laborious, and overwrought.”  

On Talkin’ Broadway, the third 45 on Show-Score, Michael Portantiere cautioned that Days, “which spends comparatively little time dealing with the plight of the striking workers and, instead, devolves for much of its length into a poorly written domestic drama—or, rather, melodrama,” “is no unearthed treasure.”  Furthernore, Portantiere said, “Probably due to both the flawed writing and a lack of strong guidance from director J.R. Sullivan, the Mint production of Days to Come is inconsistently well acted.”  The TB reviewer concluded, “The Mint staging should be seen if only for its rarity,” but added that “in the canon of management-labor conflict plays ranging from Clifford Odets’ Waiting for Lefty to Lynn Nottage’s Sweat, and including the operatic The Cradle Will Rock as well as such lighter-fare musicals as The Pajama Game and Newsies, this one ranks pretty low on the satisfaction meter.”

Melissa Rose Bernardo labeled Days “definitely a disappointing head-scratcher” on New York Stage Review (the second of the two lowest-scoring notices on Show-Score, rating a 40), adding, “And the Mint Theater Company’s current production doesn’t make a convincing case for its resurrection.”  As Bernardo sees it,


The biggest problem, apologies to Ms. Hellman, is simply the play itself, which, even almost 100 years on, is in the midst a major identity crisis.   It’s about a strike at a brush factory, but we never go inside the factory or see the picket line.  It’s about the class differences between the factory owners . . . and the workers—but we meet only one worker . . ., plus a union organizer . . . .  It’s about a husband and wife . . . who hardly see each other and talk to each other even less. . . .  In short, it’s a play about a lot of things.

“Using the strike as a backdrop is fine, if curious, choice,” declared the NYSR writer—"as long as something in the foreground is compelling and eye-catching.  And none of these characters are.”  She reported that “the Mint has supplied a handsome production,” but lamented that “the acting is surprisingly uneven.”  In the end, Bernardo observed, “The Mint has built its brand on mining diamonds in the rough and polishing them to gleaming perfection,” then concluded, “But some stones should just be left underground.”

17 September 2016

'A Day by the Sea'


My sense about plays that have been forgotten or neglected has always been—and I’ve seldom been proved wrong—that most have been so for an excellent reason: they’re not very good.  (I wrote about this impression on ROT in “Vanity, Thy Name Is Actor-Director,” posted on 22 September 2011.)  It’s exceedingly rare, I’ve found, that an overlooked gem is discovered.  (I’m thinking of Paul Osborn’s Morning’s at Seven, which was originally produced on Broadway in 1939 and then found a new audience in 1980 and ran in revival for 580 performances, winning three Tonys and five Drama Desk Awards.  A 2002 revival ran another 132 performances.)

Jonathan Bank of the Mint Theater Company, which specializes in reviving old plays, has complained that the “classic plays that are produced all the time in U.S. theaters . . . are always the same dozen or so.”  Leaving aside that Bank is speaking of “classics”—he specifies “Four Chekhovs”—not merely “oldies” (golden or otherwise), I dispute that there are only a “dozen or so.”  To begin with, there are five full-length Chekhov plays (including Ivanov) that are often staged, six if you count The Wood Demon, and a slew of popular one-acts.  Then there are the works of Barrie, Büchner, Gogol, Gorky, Ibsen, Jarry , Maeterlinck, Pinero, Rostand, Shaw, Strindberg, Wedekind, and Wilde—and that’s just the 19th century, like Chekhov, and some of the better-known writers.  Come forward into the 20th century, even just up to the ’50s, and there are scores of standards and modern classics that are popular with both theaters and audiences.  (Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur’s The Front Page from 1928 is about to get a limited Broadway run; 1939’s The Little Foxes by Lillian Hellman is coming to the Manhattan Theatre Club in the spring.)  So, from my perspective, Bank is wrong to start with.  He’s deliberately understating the truth for the sake of argument.  What I suspect he really means is that the old plays that are commonly produced on American stages aren’t the obscure, forgotten scripts he likes.  As to that, I refer everyone back to my opening assertion.

None of this means I don’t like old plays, because I do.  I have criteria that are apparently higher than Bank’s, however.  So when Diana, my frequent theater companion, suggested we catch the Mint’s revival of N. C. Hunter’s A Day by the Sea (1953) at the end of last month, I had my doubts because of my past experiences with the troupe.  The choice was Diana’s, however, and I deferred to her inclination.  (Neil Genzlinger’s rave review appeared in the New York Times the day before Diana and I saw Day, and that also made me belay my instincts.)  It turns out that my intuition, if not my decision, was right.  I also found that the ability I often have to discern whether a show will be good or bad from a publicity blurb—or, when I was acting, a casting notice—is still intact.

The Mint Theater Company, founded in 1992, declares in its programs and on its  website that its mission is to find and produce “worthwhile plays from the past that have been lost or forgotten.”  Bank, the company’s current artistic director, took over in 1995 and since then, its publicity states, the Mint’s presented “close to 50 neglected plays . . . that might otherwise have been lost forever.”  New York Times theater reviewer Ben Brantley dubbed the company “resurrectionist extraordinaire of forgotten plays” five years ago.  The troupe’s reach has gone back as far as 1852 (George Aikins’s adaptation of Uncle Tom’s Cabin, 1997) and 1886 (Leo Tolstoy’s The Power of Darkness, 2007) and as recent as 1957 (J. B. Priestley’s The Glass Cage, 2008).  The Mint’s efforts have been rewarded with not only a string of good reviews, but also an Obie Grant (2001), a special Drama Desk Award (2002), and the New York Theatre Museum’s Theatre Preservation Award (2010), as well as several Drama Desk and Lucille Lortel Award nominations. 

Though the Mint is happy just to “scour the dramaturgical dustbin for worthwhile plays from the past,” the company’s especially pleased when it introduces a writer in a new light.  A. A. Milne was best known as a children’s author, especially on the strength of his Winnie-the-Pooh books, but the Mint presented his Mr. Pim Passes By (1921) in 1997-98 and again in 2004 (in rep with 1922’s The Truth About Blayds); D. H. Lawrence was only seen as a novelist until the Mint staged The Daughter-In-Law (1912) in 2003 and The Widowing of Mrs. Holroyd (1911) in 2009; Ernest Hemingway wrote only one play, the forgotten Fifth Column (1938), which the troupe produced in 2008.  But the company’s proudest achievement is arguably its focus on women dramatists, who “have always been neglected,” points out artistic director Bank, “and women playwrights fifty or sixty years ago wrote some fine drama.”  Over half of the Mint’s productions have been by women playwrights (Zona Gale, Githa Sowerby, Rachel Crothers, Teresa Deevy, among many others); its show just prior to A Day by the Sea was the U.S. première of Hazel Ellis’s Women Without Men (1938) last January through March.

The Mint started in 1992 as an actor-training program.  When Bank become the company’s executive director, he shifted its focus to production.  The Mint began staging historical plays in 1997 with Uncle Tom’s Cabin and now produces three to four old scripts a season.  Bank, who combs through play anthologies and pours over old reviews, has said, “We try to find plays, frankly, that nobody has ever heard of.  People can come here, taking a bit of a gamble.”  And the Mint not only produces old plays, they publish them as well, in a series of Reclaimed collections (now up to five) edited by Bank and distributed free to libraries, theaters, and schools.  The Mint also hosts symposiums about the plays featuring authorities in fields related to the texts or their milieux. 

Beside being a history buff, Bank has a penchant for narratives.  His interest is primarily in “a well-written play with a good story,” he says; indeed, the company’s motto used to be: “Good stories well told.”  Bank compares today’s playwrights with those of yore and finds that past writers “were better storytellers. . . .  I think too many playwrights today think they are writing movie scripts for the theater.  There is a big difference.”  In preparing scripts for production at Mint, the company may trim some excess dialogue that Bank doesn’t think will resonate with today’s audiences, but they never rewrite or adapt the plays. 

N[orman] C[harles] Hunter was born in 1908 in Derbyshire, England, and died in 1971 in London.  He intended to follow his father, a decorated army lieutenant colonel, into a military career and even attended the Royal Military College in Sandhurst, Berkshire.  Commissioned in the Dragoon Guards in 1930, he resigned three years later to become a writer.  (To support himself, Hunter took a job on the staff of the British Broadcasting Corporation.)  Before World War II, Hunter wrote six plays and four novels, although, despite showing great promise, success in either genre eluded him.  All of Hunter’s early plays are comedies with elements of farce, but as his dramaturgy matured, his writing would develop poignancy and poetry. 

The nascent dramatist served in the Royal Artillery during World War II and spent some time convalescing in a Devon military hospital during the war.  In 1947, Hunter returned to writing plays.  His scripts showed a marked change, however, perhaps as a result of Hunter’s wartime experience.  More despairing and realistic, Waters of the Moon in 1951 and A Day by the Sea in 1953 provided Hunter with a reputation as an “English Chekhov.”  (Of course, Hunter wasn’t the only playwright of his era to be given that sobriquet.  Rodney Ackland—The Dark River, 1943—and Wynyard Browne—The Holly and the Ivy, 1950—were others, though, like Hunter, mostly forgotten today.)  In his review of the Broadway production of A Day by the Sea, Brooks Atkinson, calling the characterization “a synonym for preciousness and languor,” wrote in the New York Times: “To call a playwright ‘Chekhovian’ today is to utter opprobrium and to consign him to the doghouse.”  

Time, unfortunately, wasn’t kind to Hunter and his plays fell out of fashion with the arrival of a new breed of writers composing dramas concerning the working classes such as John Osborne (Look Back in Anger, 1956) and the Angry Young Men in the ’50s and then Joe Orton (What the Butler Saw, 1969) and Shelagh Delaney (A Taste of Honey, 1959) in the ’60s.  Hunter wrote four plays in the decade preceding his death at 62 in 1971 (The Tulip Tree, 1962; The Excursion, 1964; Henry of Navarre, 1966; The Adventures of Tom Random, 1967) but compared to the new revolutionary writers whose work dealt with topics and used language far from the drawing-room dramas of N. C. Hunter, these looked quaint and old-fashioned.  

Nonetheless, in their time, Hunter’s plays attracted such notable actors to perform them as John Gielgud (A Day by the Sea), Wendy Hiller (Waters of the Moon, 1975 revival), Sybil Thorndike (Waters of the Moon, 1951; A Day by the Sea), Ralph Richardson (A Day by the Sea), Vanessa Redgrave (A Touch of the Sun, 1958), Michael Redgrave (A Touch of the Sun), and Ingrid Bergman (Waters of the Moon, 1975).  TV films were adapted from several of his plays in the U.K.  The Actors Company Theatre (TACT) presented the New York première of Waters of the Moon in its minimally staged Salon Series in 2009.  Hunter’s 1951 play A Picture of Autumn (which received only a one-night staging in London) was revived Off-Broadway by the Mint Theater Company in 2013 (with a cast that included George Morfogen, Jill Turner, and Katie Firth of the current production). 

A Day by the Sea opened on London’s West End in 1953 and ran for 386 performances in a production that starred Sir John Gielgud (who also directed, as Julian), Dame Sybil Thorndike (Laura), Irene Worth (Frances), and Sir Ralph Richardson (Doctor Farley).  Directed in New York by Sir Cedric Hardwicke, the play opened at the ANTA Playhouse (now the August Wilson Theatre) on Broadway on 26 September 1955 with Jessica Tandy as Frances and Hume Cronyn as Julian and ran only 24 performances until 15 October.  The Mint Theater’s Off-Broadway presentation of A Day by the Sea, the only Hunter play to run on Broadway, is the first New York revival of the 1953 play.  It began previews at the Samuel Beckett Theatre on Theatre Row on 22 July and opened on 25 August; the production’s scheduled closing has been extended to 23 October from 24 September.  (Day, Mint’s inaugural show for the season, is the company’s début production in the Beckett, its new home.)  Diana and I met at the Theatre Row complex on West 42nd Street to see the 7:30 performance on Saturday evening, 27 August. 

Directed for the Mint by Austin Pendleton, the two-intermission Day by the Sea runs two hours and 50 minutes.  The story takes place over 24 hours in May 1953 at the Dorset estate of Laura Anson (Jill Tanner), a 65-year-old widow, on the English Channel 120 miles southwest of London.  Laura is occasionally visited at her home, with its quiet garden terrace by a river and a private beach where the family picnics and strolls by the sea, by her 40-year-old son, Julian (Julian Elfer), a mid-level British diplomat posted to Paris.  Also living with her is her octogenarian brother-in-law David (George Morfogen), who shifts between his memories and the present, and an attendant physician, the alcoholic, embittered Doctor Farley (Philip Goodwin).  It’s an idyllic and privileged location, undisturbed by the outside world which doesn’t seem to dare intrude aside from the daily newspaper and the “wireless radio.”  (Television, which 21% of Britons had by 1953, isn’t even mentioned.  My guess: the Ansons don’t have a set.)

Also returning for a visit this summer is Frances Farrar (Katie Firth), an orphan who was raised by the Ansons and, after a 20-year absence, is seeking refuge after leaving her suicidal second husband, with her daughter, Elinor (Kylie McVey), and son, Toby (Athan Sporek), along with their governess, 35-year-old spinster Matty Mathieson (Polly McKie).  The family solicitor, William Gregson (Curzon Dobell), pays a call during the course of the play, and Julian’s superior in the Foreign Office, Humphrey Caldwell (Sean Gormley), makes an appearance bearing portentous news.

Hunter has given each character an opportunity to take the stage and reveal her or his story, but in act two, the main focus becomes Julian’s situation.  The play is essentially about his personal and professional mid-life crises (an expression I don’t think was current in the 1950s).  His foreign service  career has been middling as younger officers have been promoted ahead of him and Caldwell has come to inform him that he’s being recalled from Paris—principally because he’s not well liked at the embassy, where he’s seen as a humorless workaholic—and he sees that his life of lost opportunities and missed chances has been wasted and unappreciated.

Julian’s biggest failure, which he’d never even recognized until now, is the possibility of marriage to Frances, who’d been in love with him since their shared childhoods.  They went their separate ways two decades ago, but Julian suddenly imagines that he can reignite Frances’s interest.  It’s too late, of course, and the same fate befalls the desperately lonely Miss Mathieson, who makes a proposal to the doctor.  Beyond contemplating Julian’s unfulfilled life, Day is about words unspoken, dreams unattained, feelings unexpressed, and hope unrealized.  The play ends on a note of despondency as no one gets even a glimmer of change for the better.

A Day by the Sea is the third Mint production I’ve seen, but the previous ones (a two-play bill of George Kelly’s The Flattering Word, 1929, and Harley Granville-Barker’s A Farewell to Theater, 1920, and Arthur Schnitzler’s 1911 Far and Wide) were as far back as 2000 and 2003.  I stopped going to the Mint because I had a recurring problem with its repertoire: I questioned the need to revive the old plays they staged.  I’m afraid I had the same problem with Day that I had with the earlier Mint shows.  It doesn’t have much to say to us in the 21st century.  Hunter’s study of “the strains and stresses of middle-age” isn’t a particularly new or under-explored topic, and it’s not terribly dramatic.  Day is all talk—for nearly three hours (one character even dares to ask, “Does something happen soon?  It’s pretty dull, this”)—and the situation and characters are so contrived that what little drama there is, is phony anyway.  (Even the acting, which I’ll get to in more detail shortly, is artificial and I suspect that the play, which isn’t a “style” piece, drove the actors into that mode somehow.)

(Diana, by the way, liked Day.  She seems to like talk plays; I had the same difference of opinion with her over Oslo in July and some years ago over David Ives’s New Jerusalem.  See my reports on, respectively, 13 August 2016 and 20 April 2014.) 

As far as I’m concerned, it’s perfectly understandable that Hunter fell quickly out of fashion as soon as Osborne and the Angry Young Men came on the scene three years after Day went on stage—and why, despite Timesman Genzlinger’s mystification, it ran only 24 performances in New York in 1955.  Furthermore, I see no damn good reason to give him a second life except as a museum curiosity. 

In its statement of the Mint’s mission, the company’s webpage posts: ”We do more than blow the dust off neglected plays; we make vital connections between the past and present.”  It’s an important point  for the troupe, and in a profile of the Mint and Jonathan Bank, the author repeats that the theater is “famous for presenting plays from the recesses of history . . . that connect to the modern world.”  As I said earlier, I don’t see it, especially not in A Day by the Sea.  Oh, yes, there are almost always some parallels and connections between period plays and today—and 1953 wasn’t all that long ago, really.  But central links, substantive associations?  No.  Universal truths about the human condition?  Nothing beyond the banal.

(A personal sidelight: In 1977, I saw Cronyn and Tandy in D. L. Coburn’s The Gin Game, another play in which there’s no real action.  Not only did the acting couple make the play eminently watchable, despite its inactivity, but they kept it running.  Gin Game stayed at the John Golden Theatre for 528 performances, but E. G. Marshall took ove for Cronyn in June 1978 and Maureen Stapleton replaced Tandy around September—and the show closed on 31 December.  Revivals in 1997 and 2025 ran respectively 164 and 115 performances, suggesting to me that the Cronyns were the reason Gin Game did so well at the box office.  Yet they couldn’t manage the same result for A Day by the Sea in 1955.  I posit that even though the Cronyns were already a renowned acting couple, the play was impervious to their appeal.)

The Anson estate is hermetically sealed against the outside world.  Julian makes gestures of involvement in the world of affairs—he carries a newspaper with him everywhere, but hardly actually reads it—but this stance is mostly used as a way to berate Laura for being uninterested in anything beyond the borders of the family estate to which she’s devoted.  In the Ansons’ version of Dorset, momentous events like the 1952 death of King George VI and the succession of Princess Elizabeth to the throne don’t seem to have happened.  Beyond Britain, the United States got a new president, Dwight D. Eisenhower, who had been the supreme commander of the Allied forces in the recent war; Joseph Stalin died in the Soviet Union, which got a new premier; Dag Hammarskjöld became the second United Nations secretary-general; the discovery of DNA was announced; Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay reached the top of Mt. Everest—all before the end of May 1953.  None of it penetrated the time warp of Hunter’s artificial, denatured world.

(By the way, also never raised is the circumstance of Frances’s divorce from her second husband.  My understanding of British divorce laws in the ’50s is that there was only one admissible grounds: infidelity.  Either Frances or her husband had to have committed adultery in order for a divorce to be granted in England at the time.  Now, I’ve heard of couples seeking a legal divorce deliberately setting up a case for infidelity, but in A Day by the Sea, nothing at all is mentioned.  Perhaps this was in the bits Bank and Pendleton cut from the text as irrelevant, but a 1950s London audience would surely have known the requirements.)

This disconnect is part of what impels me to dismiss A Day by the Sea as a viable piece of theater.  Julian is built up as engaged in the global issues of the time, rattling off a few matters his mother doesn’t even acknowledge.  But it’s an imitation of a what we’d call today a “foreign policy wonk”; not only has the accession to the throne of England’s first queen in over a generation not mentioned, but the Cold War doesn’t even get a nod.  That’s just the macrocosm—the big picture.  At the individual character level the play’s no more real.  As I said, Julian’s portrayed as someone concerned with affairs of state, but he does no more than give them lip service.  It’s a construct, not a reality, and all the other characters cleave to the same pattern.  Hunter has limned a set of characteristics for each one—Frances is lost and confused, Laura is devoted to the estate, Doctor Finley is embittered and depressed, Miss Mathieson is lonely and desperate—and the actors toe the line like puppets.  But there’s no humanity in it; it’s all pro forma, not an organic feeling in the lot. 

On top of that, Hunter’s set up each character’s personality and circumstances so that, like a little jigsaw puzzle, all the pieces fit perfectly into the schematic plot.  (Giving each character a moment to shine, however, attenuates the play without always advancing its point.  Each one explaining him- or herself at length and in detail is an anti-Chekhovian technique, spelling out what the great Russian writer made us piece together.  One’s storytelling, the other’s drama.)  Julian’s and Matty’s proposals fail because they have to, not because the characters do.  In fact, they have to make the proposals because the story demands it—Hunter’s seen to that.  Julian’s a workaholic because if he’s not, he can’t be the failure Hunter needs him to be so he can have that career and personal crisis.  Of course, like any good artificial life form, the characters of A Day by the Sea don’t change even after they have their crises; they all go right back to the way they were before the play started, a little worse off for the experience but unchanged fundamentally.  It’s a virtual drama.

I don’t know if Bank or Pendleton acknowledge this—I suspect not—but set designer Charles Morgan might have.  His scenic design suggests he recognized the artificial nature of the play.  First, the opening set, which we see when we take our seats since there’s no front drape, is a little too perfect, like a computer-generated 3-D picture.  (What it reminded me of more than anything is a scene in one of those View-Master slides we used to look at when we were kids.  It looked real, but somehow not quite.)  While the principal scenery—the garden terrace and its concrete wall and planted flower urns, the swing, the patio chairs and table, the wood-framed lounge chair—are all realistic in style, the periphery of trees and foliage isn’t; it’s slightly impressionistic, vague, fuzzy.  Again, not real.

But the first of two give-aways is that on the back wall of the stage isn’t a cyc or a painted backdrop of a receding vista, but a huge, framed painting showing the view of the hills and the river of the nearby countryside.  The painting style was sort of Hudson River School Romanticism (or whatever the British counterpart would have been).  The idealized and romanticized view of the landscape depicted by that art movement is a perfect evocation of the timbre of Hunter’s play.  (In the beach setting of act two, the river painting is switched for one showing a seashore.)  

The second manifestation of this sense of unreality I attribute to Morgan is strikingly unrealistic: the gold-and-ivory frame that demarcates the background painting is repeated around the proscenium opening and then again, halfway back over the center of the playing area above the terrace.  Together, this device calls to mind those infinitely recursive pictures sometimes seen in product packaging.  (I’ve learned that this is called the Droste effect: a picture appearing within itself, the smaller version containing an even smaller version of the picture, and so on, ad infinitum.)  It signifies to me that this is a world that folds in on itself endlessly.  Furthermore, since there’s a second “proscenium arch” within the set, it signifies to me that not only are the actors playing roles, but the characters are also playing parts.

Aside from this scenic interpretation, Morgan’s design seems to have created a directorial dilemma for Pendleton, which he wasn’t able to solve.  It looked like there’s too much distance between the off-stage edges of the set and the main playing areas downstage, where almost all the activity happens.  (Both the terrace furniture and the beach paraphernalia are down front.)  Actors entering during on-going scenes have to come onto the stage several feet, then stand for a minute or two awaiting their cues before speaking and completing their entrances.  It looks as if they’re eavesdropping, but they aren’t; they’re just waiting, and it looks very awkward and telegraphs that a new scene’s about to start.

No other design element makes this statement.  Martha Hally’s costumes are perfectly reflective of the times and class presented by the play.  Aside from lawyer Gregson and Julian, the other summer inhabitants of the Anson estate wear seasonal country or beach attire compatible with the time (the early ’50s) and place (the U.K.—let’s face it, they’re just more formal than we are here in the colonies).  Julian and Gregson, though, never appear without a dark suit; the lawyer’s on the job, so that’s understandable, but Julian probably doesn’t own even the light grey version that his Whitehall superior, Humphrey Caldwell, wears when he pays his visit.  The music of Jane Shaw and the background sounds she employs blend in the same way. 

The performances vary slightly.  I found all of the acting brittle and forced, less than natural, and I attribute that to the nature of Hunter’s script and the inherent requirements of Day: its time, place, and class.  I’ll assume that actors of the quality of this cast don’t have problems putting themselves back in time to the mid-20th century.  Next to learning lines, if they can’t do that, they’re in the wrong business.  But perhaps the upper-middle-class British milieu of Hunter’s world throws them a bit, maybe with the addition of a plummy accent as well.  (Miss Mathieson is a Scot, so Polly McKie has a different task.)  Whatever it is that makes everyone on stage take such care with their speech and behavior, it comes off as if they’re all thinking their way through every moment and each word.  That’s for rehearsal, not performance; by then, an actor should have internalized all that care and effort and I shouldn’t be seeing and hearing it.  Given how I feel about this play, I posit that the actors all sense the artificiality of the script and just can’t commit to it on a visceral level.  Just a guess, of course, but that’s my sense of what’s going on on stage.

Several of the actors, however, seem to go a step further.  As I said earlier, Day isn’t a style show: the acting is supposed to be naturalistic; but some of the cast come very close to doing style, a kind of Restoration drama-manqué.  The clearest example is Julian Elfer as Julian Anson.  (In his black suit and inability to unbend, Elfer reminded me repeatedly of English actor Ben Miller as Detective Inspector Richard Poole on the British police procedural Death in Paradise, the ultimate fish out of water.  Detailed from London to the Caribbean island of St. Marie, Poole also insists on wearing a dark suit at all times.  It doesn’t hurt this resemblance that Elfer, who’s British-born, sounds remarkably like Miller’s uptight DI Poole.)  Also suffering from this excessive artificiality is Katie Firth as Frances.  It’s less pronounced than in Elfer’s performance, but Firth, too, seems always to be on guard.  That’s not Frances being wary, but the actress treading carefully.  As artificial as I found the play on its own, the performance problems I identified added another level of unreality to the production.

Other, more fundamental problems are contingent on the acting and the directing, however.  First, though Ben Miller’s DI Poole was intended as slightly comic and eventually became endearing, Elfer’s Julian isn’t funny and never becomes a figure of sympathy.  He’s a prig with a stick up his butt and doesn’t deserve any better than he gets.  As the focal character in the play, that doesn’t bode well for the whole enterprise.  As for Laura, Tanner and Pendleton never make it clear if she’s somehow responsible for raising her son to be an ineffectual twit or if she did her best but Julian turned out the way he did despite her.  As solid as Tanner’s performance is, Laura’s little more than a catalyst for the plot: if it weren’t for her and her seaside home, the other characters wouldn’t have come together for the play.

Obviously, Pendleton is responsible for these developments, but did he select them, guide the actors to this behavior?  If he did, I can’t see any rationale for it, not artistically or dramatically at any rate.  But if the director didn’t point the actors to these performances, then why didn’t he pull them back from it or ease them out of it?  After all, that’s part of what a director is there to do—serve as the outside eye, the audience’s surrogate before the paying spectators arrive.  To be the performance editor, paring away what doesn’t belong, to shape the production the way a book editor helps the author shape her novel.  So, either Pendleton chose this manner of acting for Day, or he allowed it to remain by default.  As far as I’m concerned, he didn’t serve the play well, either way.  I doubt anything a director could have done would have made A Day by the Sea more than a middling piece of theater, a cultural-history curiosity, but the performance style of the Mint’s production only exacerbates the deficiencies I perceived.  At three hours, even small problems are magnified.

One final note on the actors: George Morfogen as Uncle David received the warmest notices, and the actor does a terrific job embodying the doddering dear old man—but poor David serves almost no purpose except as a repository for the audience’s excess sympathy and fondness.  Along with Miss Mathieson, David’s easily one of the only two truly appealing characters in the play, but what’s he actually there for?  (I might ask the same question about Elinor and Toby Eddison, Frances’s young children.  Like David, their presence adds nothing to the play.  They’re set dressing.)  Morfogen’s excellent performance is just wasted.

Based on a tally of 22 reviews, Show-Score reported that the Mint’s A Day by the Sea received 63% positive reviews, 14% negative, and 23% mixed.  The production accumulated an average rating of 77, in the positive range but moderately low from my observation of the site.  (What’s more, though Day had several 90’s and 95’s and one 100, it also got several of the lowest-scored negative notices I’ve seen so far.)

The high score went to Terry Teachout’s Wall Street Journal review, in which he lauded the company’s “refreshing originality of taste.”  Declaring that the Mint “has outdone itself” with A Day by the Sea, “the finest of the noteworthy plays” the company’s produced, Teachout pronounced the play “that rarest of rarities, a forgotten masterpiece, acted by the best ensemble cast I’ve seen in recent seasons and staged with taut vitality.”  He labeled Day “a quiet character study written in the manner of Anton Chekhov” that’s “trivial only if you think the lives of ordinary middle-class people are trivial.”  Continued Teachout, “Those are the same people about whom Chekhov wrote, and Hunter cared no less for them, portraying their sorrows with a sensitivity—and wit—that are worthy of his master.”  (The WSJ reviewer held British critic Kenneth Tynan, who, Teachout asserted, “favored the Angry Young Men of the British stage and had little use for plays without a political message,” responsible for Hunter’s demise as a successful playwright.)  Singling out Firth and Elfer for special notice, the Jounalist reported that the cast all “give vividly drawn performances” and that Pendleton “knows that the trick to making a play like ‘A Day by the Sea’ work is to winkle out the laughs and let the pathos take care of itself.”  Teachout added that “everything about this staging is as right as the play itself,” noting that the “sets are uncomplicated but utterly right” and the sound design “set just the right mood.”  The Journal review-writer concluded, “Would that Broadway were still a fitting home for plays like ‘A Day by the Sea.’ Like everything the Mint does, it deserves a much wider audience.”

The lowest score in Show-Score’s tally (30) went to north-central Connecticut’s Journal-Inquirer in which Lauren Yarger quips in her opening paragraphs that in Day, the members of a family “gaze out expectantly on the horizon waiting for something to ride in on the tide.”  But “they are disappointed—and so is the audience—because very little happens in the three-hour-with-two-intermissions production.”  In contrast with previous, more successful Mint revivals, Day “has us wondering how this play ever got produced in the first pla[ce], let alone beat out others more deserving of a revival.”  Pendleton’s Day, wrote Yarger, “features good actors, but the slim plot, sketchy character development, and exposition-laden dialogue don’t give them much to work with, unfortunately.”  Yarger also saw a similar meaning in the scenic devices in Morgan’s design to what I described earlier, the “blurry leaves hanging overhead and large impressionistic paintings”: “The blurry art is indicative of the characters[] efforts to bring a sharper focus to the meaning of their lives.”  The reviewer lamented, however, “Not much happens in the way of developing any of [the] plots, however, despite moments of hope for insightful thought.”  Suggesting that “most of Act One could be cut,” she went on to present a list of dramatic deficiencies inherent in Day and the Mint production, including “so laced with explanations of past events to give us background,” “characters sing for reasons that escape me,” and “awkward entrances by the actors throughout” as “actors seems to be walking onto stage, distracting attention, just so they can get to their marks for upcoming lines.” 

In the New York Times, which got a 90 rating from Show-Score, Neil Genzlinger opened his review by declaring, “There’s so much to like about the Mint Theater Company’s revisiting of ‘A Day by the Sea’ that it’s hard to know what to single out for first-paragraph attention.”  The Timesman called A Day by the Sea a “very well made play” about “an economically comfortable family in an anxious age,” and he asserted that director Pendleton “gets the most out of it.”  (Where the Journal’s Teachout wondered “how Hunter . . . could have dropped off the map of English-language theater,” Genzlinger marveled, “How the 1955 Broadway production of this play ran only a few weeks, despite Hume Cronyn and Jessica Tandy in the roles, is a mystery.”  I believe I’ve made my take on both questions clear.)

Michael Feingold opened his Village Voice notice by recounting one moment: “‘How much longer are we going to sit here?’ grouses an elderly uncle to the country-house clan gathered for a seaside picnic.”  Feingold added, “Many in the 2016 audiences . . . may share his irritation” (and even suggested that this might have explained the short run of the Cronyn-Tandy Broadway mounting). He provided a list of things that don’t happen (Julian doesn’t get promoted and doesn’t marry Frances, Doctor Finley doesn’t get sober or lose his job, and so on) “while Hunter’s inaction winds through its three languid hours, with two intermissions.”  Feingold had mixed feelings about Hunter’s “rhetorical expansiveness,” those long speeches his characters give.  On the one hand, he said, “his characters sometimes rise to quite vivid oratorical passages”; on the other, the “grand speeches . . . make the characters seem like empty allegorical figures, while the touches of quirky individuality turn the rhetoric hollow.”  This dichotomy, averred the Voice reviewer, “gives his plays their peculiarly cloggy quality, heightening the work’s oddity while diluting its intensity.”  As for Hunter’s dramaturgical fate, Feingold observed, “Times had changed; in due course England’s . . . theater changed with them.  Hunter’s playwriting, poised on the cusp of change, did not.”  The “Goings On About Town” column in the New Yorker called Day a “leisurely play” in a “glowing revival” which “does great honor” to the “legendary” London cast of 1953.  “Hunter’s lyrical dialogue,” wrote the New Yorker reviewer, “concerns matters practical and philosophical.”

Time Out New York’s David Cote remarked that Hunter “wears” his Chekhovian influence “slavishly,” and with some of the more obvious echoes of the master playwright, “you’re just begging for unflattering comparisons with the Russian master.”  Complaining of Hunter’s “derivativeness,” the man from TONY quipped that “it’s as if Hunter wrote on tracing paper laid over Uncle Vanya.”  Still, Cote noted, the playwright “is a sensitive observer of English neuroses and resilience” and the “fine cast . . . navigates the quippy, stiff-upper-lipness with vibrant grace.”  The play’s “a melancholy study of middle-age malaise leavened by flashes of wit and humor, good for the Anglophiles and Downton Abbey addicts,” Cote concluded, “even if this tidy revival doesn’t wash the previous criticism away with the tide.”

On Theater Pizzazz, Sandi Durell reported that, despite a ”talented cast” “wisely” directed by Pendleton, A Day by the Sea is “an all too lengthy and tedious 2 hours 55 minutes!”  Nonetheless, the play “does have its many moments of humor and heartfelt sincerity.”  “While the feelings presented in this play are universal,” wrote David Gordon on TheaterMania, “they're strained by the three-act structure, with too little action to justify its length.”  “A Day by the Sea is surprisingly relevant,” noted Gordon, but the “attractive” production, which “moves at a leisurely pace,” “cannot overcome the tediousness of the script.”  Before “any semblance of action occurs,” much of the three-hour performance must pass, and the “enigmatic quality of the moods on display doesn't help.”  The production is “pleasing to look at,” with “breezily picturesque” scenery, “lovely period costumes,” and “authentic seaside lighting.”  With the exception of a few—Gordon named George Morfogen and McKie—“most of the company is too actorly to be truly believable.” 

Samuel L. Leiter warned, “Very little happens” in A Day by the Sea on Theatre’s Leiter Side: “Lengthy monologues expressing cynicism about the state of the world as well as idealistic visions of the future mingle with casual, throwaway trivialities.  After nearly three hours, the play concludes with a tone of bittersweet regret for lost opportunities and the somewhat forced sense that a new and better phase in the lives of all concerned is about to begin.”  But Leiter lamented, “The best one can say of the revival (and of the play itself, for that matter) . . . is that it’s dully respectable.”  The blogger specified:

The staging is uninspired, the casting flawed, and the acting uneven; moreover, the slow-paced, relatively plotless play, although not entirely lifeless nor without moments of dry humor, suffers too many longueurs.  And Hunter’s writing in act one offers a lesson in how not to introduce exposition.

The set, however, is “pretty,” reported Leiter, and “there are generally effective performances from the venerable George Morfogen, . . . Jill Tanner . . ., and Polly McKie.” 

On CurtainUp, Elyse Sommer described the Mint’s Day as a “handsomely staged, splendidly performed production” that “proves that old-fashioned, well-made plays of the 1950s can still entertain and overcome their dated aspects.”  She also reported that it’s “three-acts in which nothing much happens except for a lot of exposition,” yet Sommer labels Day “distinguished.”  The CU reviewer further noted, “It’s a talky play, but for the most part talky in the best sense.”  That talk, Sommer explained, is the play’s chief asset, for though “we can pretty accurately guess what’s going to happen just ten or fifteen minutes into the play,” Hunter “makes it all fresh and, yes, timely” by “a series of revealing and acutely observed conversations.”  Pendleton keeps the traffic flowing “smoothly so that the actors can make the most of their well-developed characters and the witty interchanges.” 

Michael Portantiere complained on Talkin’ Broadway, “The play’s length and its three-act structure seem ill advised, and at least one of the 10 characters seems entirely superfluous.”  (He meant solicitor Gregson, as he later explained.)  He also observed that there are “rather too many” subplots and characters and that those plots and the “interrelationships between the characters are interesting in themselves, but they are not woven together very well by the playwright,” especially under the “flaccid direction” of Austin Pendleton.  The director, Portantiere asserted, “seems to have concentrated more on blocking and stage business than helping the cast connect with the text and with each other.”  Despite these flaws, the TB reviewer found, however, that “the Mint has given A Day by the Sea a typically gorgeous, thoroughly professional production,” with sets and costumes that “couldn’t be lovelier” or lighting “any closer to perfect.” 

In the Huffington Post, David Finkle quoted the theater critic W. A. Darlington of London’s Daily Telegraph on A Day by the Sea in 1953, who thought other critics were “demonstrably wrong” when they “treated disparagingly” the work of N. C. Hunter, whose “sense of character was acute and full of original observation”—and Finkle affirmed, “I won't attempt to put it any better.”  The HP First Nighter asserted, “A Day by the Sea practically runs down a checklist of Chekhovian aspects,” and names several of them, adding, “This is Chekhov territory, all right.”  All the actors (including, Finkle reported, the choldren) “bring infinite subtleties to their assignments” as they perform on Morgan’s “unusually elegant set” in Hally's “flawless period costumes.”  Director Pendleton “is attuned to Hunter's Chekhovian blend of disillusionment, humor and eventual acceptance and . . . brings it all to vibrant, plangent life.” 

[A completely irrelevant comment: There are two children in A Day by the Sea.  Though Hunter seems to have made a point of pinpointing the ages of nearly all his characters, he didn’t specify how old Frances’s daughter and son are, but we do know that they were born during World War II and that they were too young to really know their father, Frances’s first husband, when he was killed in combat.  Remembering that the war in Europe began in 1939, Elinor and Toby Eddison could be as old as 14 and, say, 9—but I imagine they’re about the same ages as the actors who play them at the Mint.  Kylie McVey, who plays Elinor, says she’s about to start eighth grade, which I figure makes her about 13; brother Toby is played by Athan Sporek, who says he’s 8.  During the show, I calculated how old I’d have been in May 1953.  I’d have turned 7 on my next birthday—close to the age of little Toby in the play.  Obviously we’re separated by nationality and, to a large extent, class, but in the broadest sense, I’d have been Toby.  Laura Anson isn’t the children’s grandmother by blood, but they consider her as such; my mother’s  parents didn’t have an estate, but every summer they used to take a house in Deal, New Jersey, a town on the Jersey Shore, and I vaguely remember spending time there with my mom and dad.  (There are lots of photos of me at the Deal house.  One shows my mother’s grandfather, her mother, my mother, and me sitting in a diagonal line down the steps of the house’s front veranda—four generations in chronological order.)  Toby’s and my lives were certainly nowhere near alike, but in the world of Hunter’s play, the character who most closely represents me is Toby.

[As I said: completely irrelevant.  I’m just sayin’.]