Incendiary performances by Hagerstown, MD actor David
Dossey as self-righteous special prosecutor Matthew Harrison Brady
and Raleigh actor David Henderson as abrasive defense attorney
Henry Drummond ignite Burning Coal Theatre Company’s high-octane
presentation of the explosive 1955 courtroom drama Inherit
the Wind by Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee. Indeed,
Burning Coal artistic director Jerome Davis has assembled a most
impressive ensemble for the small Raleigh, NC-based professional
theater’s inaugural production in its handsome new home in
the historic Murphey School Auditorium.
This timely topical drama, which is a fictional version
of the 1925 Scopes Monkey Trial, takes its title from a Bible verse,
Proverbs 11:29, which in the King James Version reads, “He
that troubleth his own house shall inherit the wind: and the fool
shall be servant to the wise of heart.” Indeed, the no-holds-barred
combat between Creationists and Evolutionists continues to this
very day, with considerable collateral damage to confused schoolchildren
who think that the principles of science must pass some biblical
litmus test or that the scientific method can be applied to the
basic tenets of the Christian faith. Oy vey!
Inherit the Wind unfolds on a succession
of scorching July days in a sweltering small-town Tennessee courtroom,
where former friends-turned-adversaries Brady and Drummond roar
like angry lions eyeing the last piece of meat between them and
starvation. Matthew Brady, who is a three-time presidential nominee
of the Democratic Party, hopes that victory in this important case
in this obscure venue will bounce him back onto the national stage.
His erstwhile friend Henry Drummond has more modest ambitions:
he just hopes to keep the court from unjustly imprisoning and fining
the bejesus out of his client, upstart schoolteacher Bertram T.
Cates (Stephen LeTrent), who deliberately defied Tennessee state
law by teaching Darwin’s theory of evolution in a science
class.
Thanks to the caustic commentary of cynical journalist
E.K. Hornbeck (Holden Hansen), whose Baltimore newspaper hired
Drummond for the defense and dispatched Hornbeck to cover the trial,
the Cates Monkey Trial becomes a national sensation; and the Rev.
Jeremiah Brown (Bob Galbraith) and his daughter Rachel (Jenn Suchanec),
who teaches and is in love with Cates, must air their father-daughter
disagreements publicly, for a national audience.
David Dossey is an irresistible force of nature as
Brady, and David Henderson is his nemesis — an immovable
object — as
Drummond. Their courtroom confrontations are truly titanic — and
wonderfully theatrical. Meanwhile, Stephen LeTrent makes Cates
an engaging if somewhat lightweight character, and Jenn Suchanec
gives a passionate performance as poor Rachel Brown, whipsawed
between the impossible demands of her scripture-spouting father
(played with true fire by Bob Galbraith) that she denounce the
man she loves, and testify against him in court, and her love for
and loyalty to Cates.
Holden Hansen positively slithers around the Murphey
School Auditorium stage as Hornbeck, putting sinful thoughts into
the minds of all in earshot. George Jack is a bit too mild in manner
and jovial in disposition as the corrupt Judge, who openly colludes
with the prosecution to rig the proceedings against Cates. But
Laura Jenkins adds a fervent cameo as a concerned Mrs. Brady, who
rightly fears that her husband’s gargantuan appetites will
ultimately be his undoing; and Fred Corlett as the Mayor, Al Singer
as local prosecutor Tom Davenport; Ian Finley as Meeker the bailiff,
and John Honeycutt as Mr. Goodfellow the haberdasher make the most
of their supporting roles.
Director Jerome Davis imaginatively and resourcefully
exploits every inch of the Murphey School Auditorium to restage
this landmark chapter in American history in grand style; and he
deftly orchestrates the action, repeatedly bringing this cauldron
of powerful emotions to a boil, but never letting it boil over.
The simple but highly mutable set by scenic designer Vicki R. Davis,
the artful illumination of the proceedings by lighting designer
Matthew Adelson, and the handsome 1920s outfits recreated by costume
designer Johannah Maynard all add notes of authenticity to Burning
Coal’s rousing rendition of Inherit the Wind and
help make this 1955 Broadway bombshell as provocative today as
it was 52 years ago, long before the current oxymoron Creation
Science was ever coined.
Burning Coal Theatre Company
presents Inherit
the Wind Thursday-Saturday, Feb. 7-9 and 14-16,
at 7:30 p.m.; and Sunday, Feb. 10 and 17, at 2 p.m. in the Murphey
School Auditorium, 224 Polk St., Raleigh, North Carolina. $18
($14 students, seniors 65+, and active-duty military personnel),
except $10 for Jan. 31st preview, pay-what-you-can performance
on Feb. 10th, and $5 Student Rush Tickets (available 5 minutes
before show time). 919/834-4001 or via etix @ the presenter's
site. Note: Arts
Access, Inc., will audio-describe the 7:30 p.m. Feb. 9th performance.
Burning Coal Theatre Company: http://www.burningcoal.org/ Video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FmyKfuS_sjo [inactive 8/08].
Internet Broadway Database: http://www.ibdb.com/show.asp?ID=4722.
Internet Movie Database: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0053946/.