Personal edge to ‘Hostage’
The crisis in Iran is told from the vantage of an American mom at Skylight Theatre.
Michelle Kholos Brooks’ play “Hostage” at the Skylight Theatre revisits the Iranian hostage crisis almost 40 years after the fact.
Based on real-life characters, Brooks’ new drama is filtered through the intensely personal perspective of a mother intent on freeing her son from captivity. Although Brooks arguably may shortchange the political complexities of the Iran hostage crisis of 1979 to 1981, she captures the natural maternal imperative to protect family with emotionally shattering specificity.
That impact is largely because of the tour-de-force performance of Tracie Lockwood. She plays Barbara Timm, the mother who traveled to Iran — just before a State Department travel ban took effect — to negotiate the release of her son, Kevin Hermening (Zachary Grant), a Marine guard for the U.S. Embassy in Tehran when it is stormed by Iranian militants on Nov. 4, 1979.
A small-town mother of five, Barb has never been out of the country. She braves the journey, along with Kevin’s stepdad, Kenny Timm (Jack Clinton), not knowing whether she will find her son alive or dead. After their arrival, an attempted U.S. rescue goes awry, putting the lives of all the hostages at risk, not to mention those of Barb and Kenny, who could easily have been executed in the blowback to the botched mission.
Barb gets a crash course in a foreign culture through her son’s captors, who have endured their share of loss and pain under the shah’s brutal regime. Upon her return to the states, Barb is denounced as a traitor and suspected spy.
In director Elina de Santos’ fluid staging, the action seamlessly transitions from the Tehran embassy to the Timm home in Oak Creek, Wis. All the characters remain onstage at all times. That includes gun-wielding revolutionary Ebrahim (Satiar Pourvasei); Tehran Mary (Vaneh Assadourian), spokeswoman for the uprising; and Richard Hermening (Christopher Hoffman), Kevin’s father and Barb’s ex.
Pourvasei and Assadourian stand out as the Iranian revolutionaries, whose contempt for Barb’s initially jingoistic worldview develops into increasing respect for her motherly pluck. And though Brooks’ gripping play occasionally veers into the simplistic, Lockwood’s deceptively unassuming performance is a beacon of authenticity that lights the stage.