Charlotte Maier, Vanessa R Butler, Heidi Armbruster, Alice Cannon. Photo: T. Charles Erickson |
It
Feels Like the Enemy Just Messed With Our Minds – and We’re OK with That
By
Lauren Yarger
T.D. Mitchell writes a disturbing and gripping tale of the consequences of war that orders us to stand at attention and prepare for an inspection of what we think about training people to kill. And with Queens for a Year, getting its world premiere at Hartford Stage, she examines the topic from a unique perspective: the role of females serving in the military.
T.D. Mitchell writes a disturbing and gripping tale of the consequences of war that orders us to stand at attention and prepare for an inspection of what we think about training people to kill. And with Queens for a Year, getting its world premiere at Hartford Stage, she examines the topic from a unique perspective: the role of females serving in the military.
Mitchell has visited the military before. She was a writer for TV’s “Army Wives” and explored the
stories of Viet Nam vets in her play Beyond
the 17th Parallel. It was interviews conducted for the latter
which triggered the writing of Queens for
a Year.
The play focuses on a 2007 visit by Lt. Molly
Solinas (Vanessa R Butler) to her rural Virginia home (designed in framed
simplicity by Daniel Conway) where her family is excited to welcome her and her
friend, PFC Amanda Lewis (Sarah Nicole Deaver), back from duty in Iraq. They
understand what the women have been through more than most as the multi-generational
clan know all about serving their country.
Molly’s aunt Lucy Walker (Heidi
Armbruster) served until her lesbianism and the service’s lack of tolerance for
it got her discharged. Her grandmother and namesake Molly, still goes by Gunny
(Charlotte Maier) and her great-grandmother, Lu (Alice Cannon), served in World
War II. Only Molly’s mother, Mae (Mary Bacon), isn’t all ooo- rah about a
family of Marines. Her religion and calling as a midwife who brings lives into
the world are at conflict with training to kill.
Amanda quickly bonds with Molly’s kin and feels at
home, but it is apparent that she and Molly have sought shelter at the peaceful
farmhouse from something sinister following them from Iraq. Through flashbacks,
sharply directed by Lucie Tiberghien around the fringes of the home trimmed
with camouflage material or upstairs where an uneasy Iraqi checkpoint suddenly
comes to life, we begin to understand that the biggest threat the women Marines
faced while deployed might not have come from the enemy.
Things aren’t easy for women serving overseas in the
current conflict. In fact, it is a whole different front from when Grandma Lu
packed her parachutes in the big war. Now women in service are called one of
three things, Amanda tells us: a slut, a dyke or a bitch. The play’s title,
program notes inform us, comes from an expression used to describe a female
soldier or Marine serving her overseas tour of duty year, implying that even an
“ugly” female gets away with slacking off and being unduly treated as a queen
in the male dominated environment. A wink from a woman can imply consent for
much more than intended and the knives the women soldiers carry offer protection
against enemy attack – whether it is from their own male company members or
Iraqi insurgents.
During her tour, Amanda was raped by a superior and his
buddy, but the Marines have a zero tolerance policy for these types of
incidents which means she doesn’t really have the option of reporting it or of seeking
any justice. This is made plain to her by a staff sergeant (Mat Hostetler) who
gets wind of the case and intimidates Amanda to make sure she won’t pursue it.
Molly tries to help, but a senior female officer, Capt. Diaz (Jamie Rezanour),
urges her not to get involved.
The women end up having to take things into their
own hands –with the help of Molly’s ready-made militia family -- especially
when the rapist feels threatened that Amanda might be able to prove what
happened and pursues her and Molly to Virginia.
Mitchell’s no-nonsense writing style establishes a
bond between the audience and the women early in the two-hour, 15-minute
production. In quick military fashion, we see Molly transform before our eyes
from a woman into a Marine (Beth Goldenberg costumes). We know these women and
like them all, especially Grandma Lu who reminds us all of our own beloved
elderly relatives who are not afraid to say what’s on their minds and Cannon wisely doesn't overplay the part.
The playwright makes us uncomfortable, however, by targeting
some messages that might have been trained into our thinking about what is
normal when it comes to war. We don’t question Grandma Lu’s patriotism, for
instance, but then we’re a bit disturbed by the apparent prejudice still holds
again people of Japanese descent. We are all for the US Marines – until we
start hearing some of the cadences sung out and repeated back from time to time
throughout the play. The work songs apparently are genuine, if not sanctioned,
and are too vulgar to re-print here 9the theater recommends 14 and up for viewing the play). They make us pause in our admiration for an
institution that accepts as "normal" training with chants full of glee
and pride about killing people and treating women in the most vulgar of ways.
And are we really OK with feeling nonchalant when it comes to killing?
It’s a little like realizing that the enemy has
gotten inside your mind and messed with you and now you are forced to wonder
whether you’ve been just a bit brainwashed by the good guys too. It’s
definitely theater that makes us think: it's a boot camp for the mind.
Even the conclusion leaves us questioning our values
as we surprise ourselves by easily rooting for a bloody outcome. The effect
would be even more dramatic, however, if we had a clearer understanding of why
Molly decides to take things into her own hands when she does and what her fate
is. Without that, the ambiguity weakens the impact.
Another area that could use a tweak from Tiberghien
is the timing and delivery of the humor. There is some in this play, despite
its otherwise somber theme, but some jokes are lost, or have less oomph than
they should.
Deaver is solid as the Corps-tough soldier who can’t
quite forgive herself for not being strong enough to protect herself; Bacon
finds depth in Mae that realistically portrays the love of a mother conflicted
with the path her child has chosen. Butler seems less certain in her role, but
it is fitting as Molly herself is trying to figure out where a woman can serve
comfortably in a man’s military.
Its engrossing story brings the issues of women’s
role in the military, burdens placed on families with members serving and the
realities of women in combat front and center for full inspection.
Queens for a Year plays through Oct. 2 at Hartford stage, 50 Church St., Hartford. Performances are: Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Sunday evenings at 7:30 pm.; Fridays and Saturdays at 8 pm; Saturday and Sunday at 2 pm. Tickets $25-$90. (860) 527-5151; www.hartfordstage.org.
Additional credits:
Wig Design by Jodi Stone, Lighting Design by Robert Perry; Sound Design by Victoria Deiorio, Fight Direction by Greg Webster; Dialect Coaching by Robert H. Davis.
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