Theater Review (Chicago): Magnolia at the Goodman (Premiere)

Part of: StageMage

Now that America has entered the "Age of Obama," many pundits like to speculate that we're living in a "post-racial" society. It doesn't take a mentalist to realize that this talk is based more on wishful thinking than reality. But Regina Taylor's new play takes that debate and turns it on its head, weaving a story that highlights our society's amazing strides while reminding us how close we remain to the darkness of our past. And all without leaving Atlanta in 1963.

Magnolia, showing at the Goodman through April 19, richly portrays a time in American history when, like today, many were congratulating themselves for destroying racial boundaries. But such idealism rings false for most of the characters in Taylor's Atlanta, who remember the dark past – both societal and personal – too well to free themselves of it so easily.

This is true for no one more than the play's two main characters, Thomas and Lily Forrest (John Earl Jelks, Annette O'Toole). The two, black and white respectively, share the same last name because of a common ancestry that dates back to slavery. Both have spent their lives trying to shake the shadows of their parentage, though the reputations that said parentage embodies are vastly different. To its credit, the play is not simplistic enough to paint them as polar opposites, but each is governed by an intense ambivalence about history and how it defines them.

It is critical to note that, despite its foundational racial subject matter, Magnolia is based on Anton Chekov's The Cherry Orchard. The mark of such a worthy inspiration can be seen not only in the profound and nuanced conversations that dominate the script, and not only in the clear plot parallels between Chekov's orchard and the magnolia grove the Forrest Plantation is built upon (going up for auction, despite the family's history of wealth, just as in Chekov's play), but even in the details; no character ever occupies the stage without a specific need to be there, and offstage sounds are used carefully but often, including the sound of a tree being felled, which ends both Chekov's and Taylor's script.

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Article Author: Marissa Flaxbart

Marissa Flaxbart graduated from the University of Chicago in 2005 with a degree in Cinema and Media Studies. She used to think that she was not the "film major" type. She was wrong. Marissa is an avid writer and obsessive moviegoer, television watcher, …

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