Review: Frankie and Johnny in the Clair de Lune

Plus Mrs. Grinchley; Merrimack's Beasley; Stoneham's Pageant
By CAROLYN CLAY  |  December 7, 2010

111_frankie_main
FRANKIE AND JOHNNY IN THE CLAIR DE LUNE Anne Gottlieb and Robert Pemberton make an especially believable — and wrenching — couple, warts and all.

What could be more heartwarming for the holidays than a couple of middle-aged losers getting naked? New Repertory Theatre has sent its Scrooge on a school tour and decked its intimate downstairs Black Box with Terrence McNally's sentimental yet gritty Frankie and Johnny in the Clair de Lune (at the Arsenal Center for the Arts through December 19). The 1987 play — which originated Off Broadway and was watered down for a 1991 movie starring Al Pacino and Michelle Pfeiffer — is something between an arm wrestle and a pas de deux for two actors willing to let their hair down and their robes hang open.

Frankie and Johnny begins in a tangle of sheets and a gaggle of groans as the title twosome have what Meg Ryan is having (or faking) in When Harry Met Sally. Then comes the question E.M. Forster forgot to pop: after only connecting, then what? Puppyish short-order cook Johnny, who has just gotten lucky with waitress Frankie, wants to hold on tight and never let go. The heavier-carapaced Frankie wishes he'd go home to Brooklyn so she can snuggle up in her Hell's Kitchen studio with a tub of ice cream and the TV. The play was received in its debut as a metaphor for the toughness of intimacy in a time of AIDS — which Frankie refers to as people "dying from one another." But the work holds up, especially when it's the wrenchingly believable Anne Gottlieb and Robert Pemberton (who are married) doing the holding.

The collision of McNally's Frankie and Johnny, unlike that of their folkloric counterparts, is not fatal. But they are a warts-and-all pair, damaged emotional goods struggling with whether to mark themselves down and possibly get bought. For Frankie, who spends most nights staring sadly beyond the television at domestic violence in a neighboring building, Johnny's out-of-the-blue declarations of love qualify him as a "creep." Even their intense copulation, set to the rhythms of Bach's Goldberg Variations, strikes her as "harrowing." But the desperately open-hearted Johnny, who reads Shakespeare for the Bard's "little tips," sees this as his last chance to leap, and he's determined to get this closed-down woman clinging to the cliff of her distrust to jump with him. It makes for a post-coital back-and-forth as harrowing as the sex, and classical-music aficionado McNally puts an elegant cap on it by offering up Debussy as an aphrodisiac.

Practically in the lap of its small L-shaped audience, Antonio Ocampo-Guzman's production makes the most of this intimacy. Between Pemberton's exuberant performance and the tightness of the space, there are times when you understand Frankie's urge to be rid of her Johnny. And Gottlieb's Frankie counters his bull-in-a-china-shop romanticism not just with tough-talking wariness but also with a yearning barely hinted at in the script. Fine-tuned to the small space, the pair's performances are raw yet devoid of grandstanding, allowing Frankie and Johnny to transcend their hard-luck clichés and McNally's arguably precious use of music. Frankie and Johnny has at times seemed to me a long night's work. But I was glad to stick with these two, from midnight humping to tooth brushing by the dawn's early light.

1  |  2  |  3  |   next >
Related: Felder’s Maestro; Orphans’ Mary Poppers, Things that go bump and grind in the night, Autumn garden, More more >
  Topics: Theater , Arsenal Center for the Arts, Terrence McNally, New Repertory Theatre,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY CAROLYN CLAY
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   ARTSEMERSON'S METAMORPHOSIS  |  February 28, 2013
    Gisli Örn Garðarsson’s Gregor Samsa is the best-looking bug you will ever see — more likely to give you goosebumps than make your skin crawl.
  •   CLEARING THE AIR WITH STRONG LUNGS AT NEW REP  |  February 27, 2013
    Lungs may not take your breath away, but it's an intelligent juggernaut of a comedy about sex, trust, and just how many people ought to be allowed to blow carbon into Earth's moribund atmosphere.
  •   MORMONS, MURDERERS, AND MARINERS: 10 THEATER SENSATIONS COMING TO BOSTON STAGES THIS SPRING  |  February 28, 2013
    Mitt Romney did his Mormon mission in France. But there are no baguettes or croissants to dip into the lukewarm proselytizing of bumbling elders Price and Cunningham, two young men sent by the Church of Latter-day Saints to convert the unfaithful of a Ugandan backwater in The Book of Mormon .
  •   THE HUMAN STAIN: LIFE AND DEATH IN MIDDLETOWN  |  February 22, 2013
    The New York Times dubbed Will Eno a “Samuel Beckett for the Jon Stewart generation.”
  •   ZEITGEIST STAGE COMPANY'S LIFE OF RILEY  |  February 22, 2013
    Sir Alan Ayckbourn has written more than 70 plays, most of which turn on an intricate trick of chronology or geography.

 See all articles by: CAROLYN CLAY