Raleigh Little Theatre’s humorous and ultimately
poignant presentation of dramatist and screenwriter Horton Foote’s
1953 Broadway play and Academy Award®-winning 1985 motion picture, The
Trip to Bountiful, is more than just another nostalgic
stroll down Memory Lane. The titular tiny Texas Gulf Coast town has
almost completely dried up and blown away by the time aging widow
Mrs. Carrie Watts (played by original RLT diva Ann Dearing Lincoln)
returns for one last visit after running away from her son Ludie
and daughter-in-law Jessie Mae’s claustrophobic three-room
flat in Houston. Carrie risks life and health for one final look
at the ramshackle ruins of the house in Bountiful where she grew
up and, later, reared her own family.
Ann Lincoln returns to the RLT stage after too long
an absence. In the meantime, she may have grown older and grayer — and
she may fumble a line or two — but the fierce fire that has
always burned within her still sparks her passionate portrayal
of runaway senior citizen Carrie Watts. RLT regulars Brent Wilson
and Martie Todd Sirois, who play Carrie’s mild-mannered son
Ludie Watts and his domineering wife Jessie Mae, head a strong
supporting cast. Wilson brings sympathy to the thankless role of
Ludie, always pulled first this way and then that by the eternal
tug-of-war between his obstinate wife and mulish mother; and Sirois
makes headstrong Jessie Mae Watts a perfect nemesis for headstrong
Carrie Watts in their running battles over which woman is going
to get her way most often.
Jessica Heironimus is sweet as Carrie’s fellow
bus passenger and new young friend Thelma, and Chris Gilland adds
a wry cameo as smark-alecky Houston ticket agent 2. But Jake Ferrell
is a bit too distant and a bit too aloof as the sympathetic Sheriff
sent to corral Mrs. Watts and detain her until her family can pick
her up.
The audience at last Saturday night’s performance
in RLT’s Gaddy-Goodwin Teaching Theatre honored the cast
with a rare (for Raleigh Little Theatre) standing ovation. Long-time
RLT artistic director Haskell Fitz-Simons, set and lighting designer
Rick Young, costume designer Jenny Butler, and sound designer Jim
Zervas also deserve kudos: Fitz-Simons for deftly orchestrating
the emotions so that the play tugs at all the right heartstrings
but never becomes maudlin; Young for swiftly transforming the small
black-box stage into a variety of locales, including Ludie Watts’ Houston
apartment, a couple of bus-station waiting rooms, and the front
yard of the Watts’ rundown ancestral homeplace; Butler for
creating a striking assortment of mid-1950s fashions; and Zervas
for mixing choice snippets of Gospel songs and ambient sound to
add authenticity to the proceedings.
Raleigh Little Theatre presents The
Trip to Bountiful Thursday-Saturday,
March 13-15 and 20-22 at 8:00 p.m.; and Sunday, March 16 and
23, at 3 p.m. in RLT’s Gaddy-Goodwin Teaching Theatre,
301 Pogue St., Raleigh, North Carolina. $18 ($15 students up
to and including college and seniors 62+). 919/821-3111 or via
etix @ the presenter's site. Note: All
shows are wheelchair accessible, and assistive listening devices
are available for all shows Raleigh Little Theatre: http://raleighlittletheatre.org.
Internet Broadway Database: http://www.ibdb.com/show.asp?ID=8888.
Internet Movie Database: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0090203/.
Horton Foote: http://www.ibdb.com/person.asp?ID=6348 (Internet
Broadway Database) and http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0285210/ (Internet
Movie Database). The Horton Foote Society: http://hortonfootesociety.org/. “Writing
with a Sense of Place” (a lecture by Horton Foote): http://hortonfootesociety.org/.