Talking Heads

(Photo: © Carol Rosegg)
Crikey, are these people lonely! So lonely that their solo gabfests function as metaphors for isolation. They're also far from self-aware, almost uniformly un-ironic, and reeling from being misunderstood and put upon. Bennett, some of whose best plays are rarely or never produced stateside (e.g., The Old Country and A Question of Attribution), wrote the first half-dozen Talking Heads pieces in 1988. He added six more a decade later, undoubtedly because the early ones had caught the public's fancy and because he has a facility for tossing them off. Which is not to say that these selections -- four from 1988 and two from 1998 -- are entirely facile.
While beautifully constructed, filigreed with character detail, and laden with laugh lines, the soliloquies also have less appealing traits. They tend to cover the same ground with some regularity. For instance, two of the folks examined are looking after infirm relatives and taking quiet satisfaction in their sacrifices. The title chatterer of "Miss Fozzard Finds Her Feet" has a brother who's recovering from a stroke, and Graham in "A Chip in the Sugar" has a mother who needs his constant attention -- although she'd say it's the other way around, and that's closer to the truth.

(Photo: © Carol Rosegg)
Although Miss Ruddock cutely says "joke" after she tries a pleasantry, only vicar's wife Susan -- the one married character among the sextet -- actually recognizes a joke when she hears one, so it follows that she alone evidences wit. Discussing God, despite her doubts that a deity exists, she says: "He has no taste at all." The other speakers, disinclined to make jokes, don't realize they are jokes themselves -- and the unattractive truth is that Bennett is not laughing with but at them. He gives the impression of sympathizing with their predicaments, but he's really behaving like a smart-alecky kid who gets a duller, trusting acquaintance to open himself up to ridicule. The sour smell of patronization hovers over the enterprise.
Nevertheless, Bennett has any number of tricks to keep the audience from noticing his superior attitude. For one thing, the monologues' opening lines are swift and cunning. "I can't say the service was up to scratch," Miss Ruddock remarks; "It smacked of the conveyor belt, in fact." Susan opens her non-Catholic confession with: "Geoffrey's bad enough, but I'm glad I wasn't married to Jesus." Lesley allows, "I shot a man last week." The author is so good at this that he grabs us every time.

(Photo: © Carol Rosegg)
Christine Ebersole's Miss Ruddock, wearing a tight perm and another of Donnelly's rightly frowsy outfits, points and capers to wonderful purpose; line for line, she may reap more laughter than any of the others. Valerie Mahaffey, clutching a flimsy red robe around her, makes the self-deluding Lesley giddily obtuse. Kathleen Chalfant, who never disappoints, has the proper hauteur for the brittle, disillusioned Susan. Daniel Davis is terrific as a mama's boy, and Brenda Wehle's Celia has the right air of self-satisfaction. All of the players' accents are on target, so a special nod goes to dialogue coach Deborah Hecht. (Incidentally, Frances Sternhagen has memorized a seventh monologue, "Waiting for the Telegram," and is ready to substitute whenever one of the others is indisposed.)
Although Talking Heads doesn't represent Alan Bennett at his absolute best, it's easy to see its attraction for producers. Six actors and a few chairs are all that's needed. Scenic designer Rachel Hauck has selected the chairs. The supplementary projections are by the ubiquitous Wendall K. Harrington, who has done her usual neat job but for one immense gaffe: In "The Hand of God," Celia insists that she'd never handle Staffordshire, but behind her is a slide -- repeated five times -- of shelves on which Staffordshire dogs perch. Well, perhaps they make her feel a little less lonely.
recommend, approve and/or guarantee such events, or any facts, views, advice and/or information contained therein.
©1999-2012 TheaterMania.com, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Terms of Use & Privacy Policy