Los Angeles Times

‘Raisin’ excels in Pasadena

- By F. Kathleen Foley calendar@latimes.com

A Noise Within’s “A Raisin in the Sun” draws audiences fully into the classic.

For anyone who has not yet experience­d playwright Lorraine Hansberry’s “A Raisin in the Sun,” the current production at A Noise Within is an opportunit­y to experience a near-optimum staging of this American classic.

The play centers on the embattled Younger clan, a hard-working African American family making ends meet in 1950s Chicago. The ramshackle apartment, richly realized by scenic designer Stephanie Kerley Schwartz’s set, suggests a family with pride making do on limited means.

When matriarch Lena (Saundra McClain) receives a $10,000 insurance payment following her husband’s death, a long-deferred dream of buying a house seems within reach. But having so much cash in hand warps the judgment of son Walter Lee (Ben Cain), and Lena’s attempt to purchase a home in an all-white neighborho­od also puts the Youngers’ future in doubt.

Inspired by Hansberry’s own family’s Supreme Court case, the play is written from the intensely personal perspectiv­e of someone who struggled against discrimina­tory housing practices. Against this backdrop, McClain’s portrayal is rich in humor and humanity.

Cain shines in one of the most complex, frustratin­g and richly flawed characters in American drama, capturing the agonizing self-doubt under Walter Lee’s machismo while allowing his character’s earthy humor to come to the fore.

Gregg T. Daniel’s direction conveys the droll, heroic sprawl of the embattled Younger clan. The production does sometimes venture perilously close to stereotype, particular­ly in Sarah Hollis’ portrayal of Beneatha, Walter Lee’s sister, an undeniable crowdpleas­er but a character who can seem like mere comic relief rather than an organic component to the play. Toya Turner may be a bit too youthfully gamine to be completely convincing as Walter Lee’s long-suffering wife, Ruth.

But these are trivial objections in the context of a fine production. This staging draws us fully into the lives of the vibrant Youngers, the clan that redrew the boundaries of the all-American family.

 ?? Craig Schwartz ?? BEN CAIN stars as the complex and richly f lawed son Walter Lee.
Craig Schwartz BEN CAIN stars as the complex and richly f lawed son Walter Lee.

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