Thursday, August 14, 2008

Donuts


All my writing, reading, and internetting time has been devoted to working on my dissertation proposal, with the occasional burst of writing poems here and there, but I wanted to make a quick comment about the play Superior Donuts, showing at the Steppenwolf. I'm far from a theater critic, but I really, really liked this play.

It's set in a donut shop in Uptown, run by an old Polish-American Vietnam war resister/stoner/etc, played by David St. Hubbins. I'm not going to summarize the play or review it or anything, but I wanted to share that I thought it was awesome.

More specifically, I was worried that it was going to traffic in overblown old Chicago nostalgia, and self-righteous commentary about gentrification in Uptown, which would be pretty rich coming from a well-established theater company. (I'm not saying that artists, even/especially middle-class ones, shouldn't address gentrification, and I'm also not saying that the play dodges the issue at all. But it does so in a much more nuanced, thoughtful, etc way than I had anticipated.) Anyway, you get your Magikist and Starbucks riffing, but not in a nauseating way at all. The sense of nostalgia and awareness of change shared by the playwright and the thoughtful characters really suits how I understand it: they use nostalgia as a way to tell their stories and express their feelings about the world around them. It's done really, really beautifully. And if you're a softie like me who thinks that realistic, unromantic human kindness and love is often underrepresented in the arts, I dare you not to cry at the end.

The play, written while playwright Tracy Letts was dealing with the attention and massic success of Ausust: Osage County, is not perfect. I generally like its sociology but found Franco a bit of a "magic Negro," and I have a hard time believing that a Black cop working an Uptown beat is gonna flinch at a Russian business owner referring to "black sons of bitch." What I'm saying is occasionally the writing shows a tiny, tiny, tiny bit of relying on easy archetypes and sight gags like eastern Euros in tracksuits and the word "douchebag," but you all know I'm not complaining, I'm just saying.

PS- When on the southside and looking for a donut, eat at Dat's. 83rd and Cottage. Open all night.

2 comments:

Hallie said...

Don't like, you often rely on the word "douchebag"? Not that there's anything wrong with that.

John said...

Yes I do, and I used to wear a lot of tracksuits.