Los Angeles Times

‘Warhol’s Tomato’ a tonic for culture wars

- By Philip Brandes

Staunchly working-class Pittsburgh in 1946 was hardly an ideal incubator for creative talent. That incongruit­y, however, provides an inspired backdrop for the chance encounter between a disillusio­ned, middle-aged bar owner and a frail, 18year-old art student destined for greatness in “Andy Warhol’s Tomato,” Vince Melocchi’s quietly touching two-hander making its debut at Pacific Resident Theatre.

The drab, close-cropped Andy depicted here by Derek Chariton is a long way from the flamboyant, leather-clad celebrity of the 1960s New York art scene. At this point, young Andy’s ambition to become a commercial artist is hanging by a thread because of failing grades in his first year of college.

With a deadline looming in his last-chance remedial drawing class, a panic attack has left Andy recovering in the basement of a neighborho­od bar run by kindhearte­d “Bones” Bonino (Keith Stevenson), a selfmade businessma­n who proves surprising­ly openminded despite his gruff, nononsense demeanor.

Warhol, himself the child of hardworkin­g Eastern European immigrants, shares Bones’ “pull yourself up by your bootstraps” ethos but little else. Chariton’s richly shaded performanc­e is an intriguing mix of Andy’s awkward self-consciousn­ess and unshakable confidence in his artistic gifts, the detailed career path he’s mapped out for himself.

Andy’s fully formed marketing savvy comes to the fore when he agrees to paint a street sign for Bones’ bar. Whether he regards Bones as a friend and benefactor or just an interestin­g specimen is kept deliberate­ly ambiguous for much of the play — beneath the halting “Uhs” that punctuate his diffident banter lurks Warhol’s notorious talent for passive-aggressive manipulati­on.

Playwright Melocchi has clearly done his homework with respect to historical accuracy. Neverthele­ss, the play offers more than a biographic­al sketch thanks to the reciprocal fleeting connection between Chariton’s Warhol and Stevenson’s equally complex performanc­e as Bones, a sympatheti­c Everyman who harbors an unfulfille­d dream of becoming a writer.

Tracing assured emotional beats under Dana Jackson’s finely tuned direction, Bones’ secret longing is rekindled by Andy’s fearless talent and encouragem­ent. In return, the pragmatic Bones helps Andy overcome his own creative block by urging him to appreciate beauty in the mundane — a simple tomato is a miracle if you look at it the right way. Or package it in a soup can.

Amid the ongoing culture wars between urban-elite and blue-collar sensibilit­ies, Melocchi’s period play slyly reminds us the division can be bridged by our fundamenta­l human need to create.

In the process, we can become something more than what our circumstan­ces have shaped us to be.

 ?? Teak Piegdon-Brainin ?? A BAR OWNER (Keith Stevenson), left, with Andy Warhol (Derek Chariton).
Teak Piegdon-Brainin A BAR OWNER (Keith Stevenson), left, with Andy Warhol (Derek Chariton).

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