Most Popular
-
Perez Hilton Picks a Fight
Haters and lawsuits threaten Miami's infamous celebrity gossip export.
-
The Murder of Master Do
Ten murders and Haitian gangs roil the quiet town of North Miami.
-
Poisoned Well
What was contaminating our drinking water? Who knows - Dade officials stopped looking.
-
A Felony with That Croqueta?
Criminals are everywhere at the nation's best-known Cuban eatery.
-
Che Guevara Who?
Cubans get pissed, an artist gets even, and the supreme prosecutor of the Cuban revolution gets booted from Dadeland.
-
A Pregnant Pause (12)
Drink heavily and don't worry. That baby will be fine.
-
Sour Milk (7)
Tennessee Williams gets walloped in the Design District.
-
Carbonell Cold Shoulder (7)
We're all losers at South Florida's biggest awards show.
-
Poisoned Well (6)
What was contaminating our drinking water? Who knows - Dade officials stopped looking.
-
Perez Hilton Picks a Fight (6)
Haters and lawsuits threaten Miami's infamous celebrity gossip export.
-
Sour Milk
Tennessee Williams gets walloped in the Design District.
-
Carbonell Cold Shoulder
We're all losers at South Florida's biggest awards show.
-
Hot and Sour
China's booming art parade makes a second stop in Coral Gables.
-
Mission Impossible
New Theatre's latest is an abject lesson in hot air.
-
A Bug's Death
Fabian Peña turns his obsession with the cockroach into art.
-
Two Covers Are Not Better Than One
08:45AM 04/17/08 -
Magic City Kitty - Phone Banging
08:39AM 04/17/08 -
Jake Long Is Not Too Fired Up About Becoming a Dolphin + The Dolphins' Schedule
08:19AM 04/17/08 -
The Rock Three-Year Anniversary Blowout Tomorrow!
01:25PM 04/17/08 -
Bruce Springsteen Supports Obama for President
12:02PM 04/17/08 -
Jazz Singer Carmen Lundy in South Florida Tomorrow Night
08:02AM 04/17/08
What we are writing about
- Arsht Center
- Bicentennial Park
- Churchill's
- CiFo Art Space
- Coconut Grove
- Coral Gables
- Culture Room
- Design District
- downtown Miami
- Fillmore
- Fort Lauderdale
- Hollywood
- Julia Tuttle Causeway
- Little Haiti
- Little Havana
- Marc Sarnoff
- Miami Art Museum
- Miami Beach
- Miami local art
- Miami local music
- Miami local theater
- PlayStation
- sex offenders
- Studio A
- Tobacco Road
- Ultra Music Festival
- White Room
- Wii
- WMC
- Wynwood
Recent Articles By Brandon K. Thorp
-
Great Light Way
Subtle it's not, but Forbidden Broadway offers its own brand of brash fun.
-
Carbonell Cold Shoulder
We're all losers at South Florida's biggest awards show.
-
Sour Milk
Tennessee Williams gets walloped in the Design District.
-
Flipping the Bird
Go ahead and get angry. GableStage is fine with that.
-
Company Loves Misery
New Theatre gets gritty with A Nervous Smile.
National Features
-
Seattle Weekly
Back from Iraq
Camaraderie is in short supply between today's soldiers and older vets.
By Nina Shapiro -
Village Voice
Scientology 's Celebrity Defector
TV star Jason Beghe reveals secrets of the controversial church.
By Tony Ortega -
The Pitch
Spirited Away
Can't get a Catholic exorcism in Kansas City? James Vivian is here to help.
By Peter Rugg -
Riverfront Times
Line Up, Tough Guys
Here's an idea: Let felons become bail bondsmen.
By Keegan Hamilton
Mission Impossible
New Theatre's latest is an abject lesson in hot air.
By Brandon K. Thorp
Published: April 17, 2008
Dialectics being the dry things they are, plays set up around meetings-of-minds tend toward the masturbatory and dull. The Mission isn't either, because of an almost Murder She Wrote-like penchant for pulpy plot twists and sudden shocking revelations. Awful as that sounds, and awkwardly as it's executed (the most shocking revelation of all, saved for the end, really could have come from Angela Lansbury's old mysteries-by-the-numbers), it's probably the best thing about the play. There really is a certain pleasure in watching this onion peel.
But an onion is still an onion, and so even as you enjoy the melodrama, you might find yourself distracted by a strange, low sound, like the tortured bending of old wood. It seems to emanate from all corners of the New Theatre's small auditorium. In fact that sound originates in your own throat. It is a noise of mingled horror and shame that is the only possible response to this tale of the ideologically opposed prisoner Joe Conte and chaplain Father James Corcorran, as they fall prey to a total lack of sympathy in artistic director Ricky J. Martinez's directing, and the unselfconscious, ham-handed verbosity infecting every last page of Jules Tasca's script.
Tasca is an Oxford professor who has written more than a hundred plays that could very well be excellent, but he has no idea how actual people speak. Midway through the show, I began jotting down fragments of some of the more painful phrases Conte used in his debates with the priest: "On the chessboard of existence." "In the existential game." "Inner smile of my heart that seeps through my lips." "Veil of polluted souls." "Each man is a labyrinth of evil unto himself." "Learn-ed in every deceitful ploy." "Rancor is as thick as cheese." "Black hole of deafness." "Pain attached to humanity like a pilot fish to a shark" (the script might actually say "attractive to humanity," but that's not what I heard). "I saw your dormant lust." "Just as sure as I locked you in a cage of sin."
Joe Conte is no ordinary prisoner; he's an intellectual with an inflated sense of his own verbal facility. But rather than having Conte and Corcorran square off in the passive-aggressive style actually used by real people, Martinez has actor William Gressman bray Conte's lines like an angry thug. The result is that when Conte and Corcorran begin talking about what fast friends they've become, midway through the play you wonder what you've missed. Certainly there was no sense of growing affection in the preceding scenes. Conte mostly just screamed, and Corcorran mostly just took it.
Maybe I caught The Mission on the wrong night. For this production, Martinez has introduced a newish gimmick at his theater: At every other performance, Gressman and actor Ricky Waugh, who played Corcorran at the show I attended, trade off roles. Gressman certainly has no feeling for long-winded poetics or agro — maybe he's more suited to vestments than jumpsuits.
At the same time, Waugh might fare better as a convict than as a priest. He played a very convincing bad-ass in Promethean Theatre's Two Sisters and a Piano just a couple of months ago, displaying far sturdier dramatic chops than are evidenced here. In The Mission, Waugh utterly overcooks the priest's nervous stutter, his chief dramatic affectation, until it overshadows everything he says. "I could call — could call — the b-b-b-bishop anytime I like," he insists, so obnoxiously delicate you figure the b-b-b-bishop will hang up the moment he realizes who's on the line.
This is Martinez's fault. He could have let some subtlety into his overheated production. He could've told Conte not to scream all the time, could've had Corcorran kill some of the affectations. Perhaps he could have even chopped out some of Tasca's most ornate filigree. But he didn't do that. Martinez's love of all things bigger, better, louder, more-er — a pining for operatics, histrionics, all climax and no foreplay — sucks up all the oxygen in the room. This unthinking adherence to bombast blinds artists to the real potential of their source material.
The Mission's failures are many and complex. They are also tragic, because underneath all those layers of unnaturally baroque language, bone-headed direction, broad-stroke acting, and screaming egomania, there is an interesting story waiting to be told. This is not that telling.









