Chicago Sun-Times

Harlem through haunted eyes

- By JUSTIN HAYFORD | CHICAGO READER

As a performer, Dael Orlandersm­ith, who wrote and starred i n the Obie- winning 1995 one- person show Beauty’s Daughter, is pure empathic gravitas. Her choppingbl­ock physique, orotund voice, and stately bearing give her a monumental presence, while her uncanny ability to conjure exquisitel­y damaged and pathetic characters lends a disarming warmth to everything she does. Chicago’s Wandachris­tine, who performs

Beauty’s Daughter in American Blues Theater’s current revival, is in many ways Orlandersm­ith’s polar opposite. She’s lithe and unassuming. Nothing about her intimidate­s or towers. And when it comes to creating characters, she’s as demonstrat­ive as Orlandersm­ith is reserved.

So perhaps it’s not surprising that director Ron OJ Parson has staged Beauty’s Daughter in a bracing, if not entirely successful, antiOrland­ersmith style. The 90- minute show, made up of monologues and poems, is a care- fully curated gallery of late 20th- century Harlem denizens, from heroin- addled former blues man Blind Louie to aspiring novelist and small- time dope dealer Papo to elderly starlet once- was Mary Askew. Each desperatel­y needs something from tough- as- nails poet Diane, who’s fled Harlem to pursue literary ambitions and now acts as the audience’s tour guide through her former neighborho­od. While Orlandersm­ith is famous for appearing on a mostly empty stage with few if any props, here scenic designer Caitlin McLeod ensconces Wandachris­tine in Diane’s fully realized apartment, which Paul Deziel’s lush projection­s transform into other locations— a street corner, a neighborho­od bar, other people’s apartments— when not obscuring it entirely under a flood of images and words pulled from Orlandersm­ith’s poems. Extending the production’s overarticu­lation, Parson ends each monologue with a full blackout, after which Wandachris­tine exits and reenters in a new costume.

And that overarticu­lation continues i n Wandachris­tine’s approach to her characters, all of whom are given distinctiv­e gestures, speech cadences, and accents. Rather than monologues, she gives us acting scenes. At times Beauty’s Daughter is less a show than a showcase.

But that problem is, to a degree, inherent in Orlandersm­ith’s text, which journeys through several blocks of Harlem, as well as several decades of Diane’s life, without getting much of anywhere. For the most part we meet a handful of people ensnared in an impoverish­ed neighborho­od, see their flaws, fears, and humanity, and move on.

Still, those encounters can be quite affecting, and Diane continuall­y struggles to make peace with her past. When we meet her spiteful, resentful, alcoholic mother, Beauty, who insists her daughter is, among other things, a failure, it’s easy to understand why. Ultimately Diane concludes that, with the exception of an elderly neighbor who gives her old blues 78s, humanity is “a collective mass of parasites who use guilt to put each other down.”

At times it’s almost too much to witness, which ironically makes the evening’s showcaseli­ke style particular­ly effective, at least in parts. This Beauty isn’t a clever monologist’s ingenious invocation; she is here before us, fully and unavoidabl­y. And she dawdles and dallies, occupying every inch of the theater, trying our patience, musing over the ruins of her life, insisting on claiming the stage for no other reason than to run her daughter down. It’s harrowing to see her brought fully to life. If Wandachris­tine performed all her characters with equal commitment, the evening would be devastatin­g. But on opening night she had only half firmly under her belt.

Throughout the show, Orlandersm­ith lingers over Diane’s literary bent, imagining the thing that separates Diane from the “ladies of the night” on her old block are the books in her room. Poetry may indeed have been Orlandersm­ith’s ticket to a better life, but it’s disappoint­ing that she envisions the arts— namely literature and music— as the only route out of Harlem, or toward any semblance of happiness, for anyone. It’s a blinkered approach that not only imagines Harlem as a place necessaril­y to be abandoned, but dooms its nonartisti­c inhabitant­s to perpetual misery. vR BEAUTY’S DAUGHTER Stage 773, 1225 W. Belmont, 773- 327- 5252, americanbl­uestheater. com, $ 29-$ 39.

 ??  ?? Wandachris­tine MICHAEL BROSILOW
Wandachris­tine MICHAEL BROSILOW

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