Los Angeles Times

Jabbing and feinting against disappoint­ment

In marital ring, Danny Glover fumbles as ex-boxer wooing wife, leaving ‘Yohen’ TKO.

- By Daryl H. Miller daryl.miller@latimes.com Twitter: @darylhmill­er

Consider this poignant moment in “Yohen,” a retirement-years marital drama being revived with Danny Glover as its star:

The movie and stage actor, portraying a former amateur fighter, shadow boxes while letting a phone ring unanswered. The caller, seen on the other side of the stage, is his estranged wife, trying to reach out after a contretemp­s. Both are jabbing and feinting against disappoint­ment.

Artfully staged and moodily lighted, this brief, between-scenes interlude communicat­es more effectivel­y than most of the 85 minutes around it. For a few moments, at least, no one has to speak, which proves an unintended blessing for a production plagued at its Wednesday opening by so many fumbled lines that the story never had a chance to catch hold.

The presentati­on at East West Players’ theater in downtown L.A. is a repeat of a notable 1999 collaborat­ion between the Asian American theater organizati­on and an African American one, the Robey Theatre Company. East West is in the midst of a season focused on partnershi­ps; it has “Kaidan Project” running in a co-production with Rogue Artists Ensemble as well as this reteaming with the Robey, of which Glover is co-founder.

When Glover originated this role 18 years ago, F. Kathleen Foley, writing for The Times, praised his “towering effectiven­ess” while cautioning that his performanc­e was “imperfect.” This time, the imperfecti­ons dominate.

The script is by Philip Kan Gotanda, author of such plays as “Yankee Dawg You Die,” “The Wash” and “Fish Head Soup.” He’s known for giving voice not just to Asian Americans but also to many others who feel marginaliz­ed. Here he considers the ostracism faced by a retired black military man and his Japan-born wife, though that’s just one factor roiling to the surface during an agitated phase in their long marriage.

Set in 1980s Los Angeles, the story unspools episodical­ly, parceling details over time.

Glover’s James Washington arrives at a suburban door, hesitates, then knocks. There’s no immediate answer. Then, within, June Angela’s Sumi emerges, smoothing her carefully chosen clothing as though preparing for a date. It takes a while to figure out, but Sumi has turned James out of their home and asked him to court her anew.

For the most part, this couple’s difficulti­es could be anybody’s, years of habits that seem no longer bearable. Gotanda layers in symbolism: James, fond of coaching kids in boxing, speaks with his fists, while Sumi, a student potter, uses her hands to make art. The play’s title reflects their marriage. Yohen is a name for pottery that acquires its character from chance events in the kiln. The pieces can seem flawed yet unexpected­ly beautiful. (Gotanda in his early 20s apprentice­d with a potter in Japan for a year and a half.)

Humor as well as yearning emerge from the characters’ difference­s. In the rare moments when the courting is going well, Angela’s Sumi turns shy yet pleased, revealing glimpses of her younger self. Glover’s James is gruffly amiable.

But the script has drawbacks. It withholds too many important details until the end, by which point we’ve long since given up hope that the play is anything more than an unfortunat­e eavesdrop on a neighbor’s marital discord.

A bigger problem, at least on Wednesday, was Glover’s low-energy, hard-to-hear, text-garbled performanc­e. He tried to guffaw through lines he couldn’t remember or that came out backward, but his portrayal — and the production as a whole, directed by Ben Guillory — suffered. As the couple squabbled in a partly realistic, partly fanciful living room designed by Christophe­r Scott Murillo, events failed to build momentum, emotions refused to flow.

The beauty in this yohen of a marriage was difficult to spot.

 ?? Michael Lamont ?? DANNY GLOVER and June Angela play a long-wed couple trying to repair their marriage in “Yohen.”
Michael Lamont DANNY GLOVER and June Angela play a long-wed couple trying to repair their marriage in “Yohen.”

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