For many the iconic footage of Navy helicopters evacuating refugees from the American embassy in Saigon is a detached historical bookend to a distant war. For playwright Christina Joy Howard, the images hit painfully close to home. Her new play, The Last Day, now running at LOFT Ensemble in the Arts District, is the story of her father’s experience as a civilian during the evacuation. Memory and identity run deep in this evocative conjuring of the past in the present.
Wednesday, May 16, 2012
PRESS | PUBLICITY
Inspired by her father's crucial but clandestine involvement in the
U.S.' evacuation of Saigon as it was taken over by the Viet Cong
(signaling the failure of the Vietnam War), a young woman struggles to
capture accurately his personal story as well as bridge their emotional
distance. Piecing together father Bruce Howard's fraught and patchy
memoirs and audio recordings into a play, writer-actor Christina Joy
Howard adopts an unusual approach by revealing the creative process to
the audience. In addition to (scripted) conversations between her and
the cast, we observe reality TV-style "video confessionals" while the
actors rehearse. Christina plays herself (the writer) as well as her own
mother in scenes that flashback to the '60s and later the fall of
Saigon in 1975. Director Tiger Reel scores unhurried scene changes with a
jukebox arrangement of mostly Brit-pop hits from the era, projecting
snapshots of Christina's youthful parents and raw TV news footage on a
massive and mobile screen. Unfortunately, the panic and desperation of
the evacuation is vivid on newsreel but insufficiently present onstage.
Despite overzealous character acting from some of the ensemble, the
leads (Christina and Noah Benjamin, playing both himself and Bruce
Howard) give excellent performances.
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