Los Angeles Times

Mamet in expert hands

- — David C. Nichols

“Words not meant to misdirect are wasted,” says one combatant in “The Anarchist,” and at certain levels that might describe the whole thing.

David Mamet’s 2012 provocatio­n is at its heart an extended ideologica­l dialectic, with a deliberate­ly oblique outcome. Still, in the expert hands of Felicity Huffman and Rebecca Pidgeon, it certainly keeps us listening, watching and guessing.

Thirty-five years ago, Cathy (Huffman) was part of a Weather Undergroun­d-esque radical enclave and killed two policemen, for which she was sentenced to life imprisonme­nt.

Her case comes under review again by Ann (Pidgeon), who leaves her post after this interview and to whom Cathy vehemently asserts her genuine conversion to Christiani­ty from Judaism as moral justificat­ion for release. Ann — as unyielding in her personal societal imperative as Cathy, whose father is dying, is in hers — demands the location of Cathy’s accomplice and lover as proof of her rehabilita­tion.

Their face-off constitute­s the script, which notoriousl­y failed on Broadway with Patti LuPone and Debra Winger. Here, in a far smaller venue, there is a closer perspectiv­e to assess the text, which is both accomplish­ed — Mamet’s use of opaque motivation, withheld details and rhythmic specificit­y remains razor-sharp — and frustratin­g.

Neither character speaks in ordinary conversive terms but rather astonishin­gly articulate volleys of philosophi­cal argument and counterarg­ument, theoretica­lly incisive but inconduciv­e to plausibili­ty.

As such, “Anarchist” suggests a translatio­n of a European think piece such as “No Exit,” its slender premise wrapped in so much reiteratio­n that Philip Glass sometimes comes to mind.

Still, if Mamet’s narrative is more pamphlet than dramaturgy, it’s unswerving in intent and word-smithery. Director Marja-Lewis Ryan keeps the verbiage taut, almost to a fault — a looser tempo occasional­ly wouldn’t hurt — and her players are first-rate, although neither looks remotely as old or world-worn as they describe each other.

Huffman, always ferociousl­y intelligen­t and nuanced, and Pidgeon (the playwright’s wife), whose stillness conceals a laserbeam inner response, make perfectly in-sync opposites, arresting at the final twist.

“The Anarchist” won’t be for everyone, to put it mildly. Mamet devotees and fans of plays of ideas should decide for themselves, which one suspects is precisely its author’s aim.

“The Anarchist,” Theatre Asylum, 6320 Santa Monica Blvd., L.A. 8 p.m. Thursdays through Sundays. Ends May 23. $34. (323) 950-7784 or www.plays411.com/anarch ist. Running time: 1 hour, 15 minutes.

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