A SONG FOR MY FATHER
by
David Budbill
|
|
The
World Premier
at
Lost
Nation
Theatre,
Excerpts from Reviews
David Budbill's new play A Song for My Father is a stunner, a powerful work that's both a painful analysis of and a loving elegy for a flawed patriarch. . . It's also such a strong play because it never takes a cheap shot at honesty even as the father and son are taking cheap shots at each other. . . A Song for My Father is a heavy play broken by tremendous touches of humor. . . Budbill has created a work that aspires to classic heights while staying true to his own life and, in many ways, the lives of everyone.
Brent
Hallenbeck
The
April 24, 2010
Budbill's somewhat
autobiographical story
of his relationship with his father during the latter's final years is
powerful
not only for its authenticity but for its universality. . . . Although
there
are tough moments in this intense drama, there's plenty of humor.
Particularly
funny - and realistic - are Frank's sexual overtures to the buxom nurse
in his
nursing home. There is also plenty of humor as we see ourselves in this
psychologically accurate drama. . . . David Budbill's A
Song for My Father is dramatic theater at its best.
Jim
Lowe
The
Sunday Barre (VT) Times Argus/Rutland (VT) Herald
April 25, 2010
Budbill weaves humor into the
convincing
dialogue, so the net effect of this drama is far from depressing but
curiously
hopeful . . . . A Song for My Father
is a preview of what we all will experience sooner or later, if we
haven't
already, and it well embodies one of the primary functions of theatre
in
particular and art in general, which is to create a mirror in which we
can see
ourselves more clearly.
David
K.Rodgers
The
Hardwick (VT) Gazette
April 28, 2010
David Budbill's new play is
brilliant and
powerful and explores areas within difficult relationships that people
often
don't want to explore. The play is a tribute in a way, but it's not a
comfortable thing to watch. . . . Don't go to see A
Song for My Father if you are looking for an evening of light
or
mindless entertainment. You will leave the theatre emotionally drained
and yet
weirdly hopeful and wanting to talk to your father or your son, or
anyone else
in your life remotely resembling a family member.
The
Chronicle (
April 28, 2010
Budbill has far too much class
and
appreciation for reality to sugarcoat an ending, but he also avoids
gratuitous
grief. It was clear just by listening to those around me that the play
had
achieved precisely what the playwright wanted, "to release powerful
feelings
of sadness, foreboding and grief and in the process, like the blues,
make you
feel better, refreshed, lighter, even happier." The standing ovation
and
demand for a second curtain call is testimony to the play, the players,
and the
production team who have given central
The
Herald of Randolph (VT)
April 29, 2010
If you're interested in
powerful,
thoughtful acting, and a heart-rending story that tackles life's
biggest questions
head-on, go. . . . David Budbill's new play isn't light, happy fare.
It's
serious theater. It will prompt big thoughts. . . . Budbill masterfully
succeeds in connecting his characters' lives with the big questions of
our
time: Jobs and the environment, unemployment and the rage of the
increasingly
alienated American worker. . . . The play is clearly Budbill's paean to
his
father, but it's also a gift of self-contemplation from the
playwright-poet-philosopher to the rest of us.
Stowe
(VT) Reporter
May 6, 2010
Lost Nation Theater's
presentation of
David Budbill's play, A Song for My
Father, is not about pleasure or entertainment. It's a work
of art whose
primary concern is with truth--the truth unflinchingly told about the
reality
of a son's painfully unfulfilled relationship with his father . . . a
powerful
play about a son's struggle to come to terms with himself and his
father.
The
Bridge (
May
6, 2010
* * * * *
Performance Pictures
* * * * *
THEATREGOERS COMMENTS ON
A SONG FOR MY FATHER
That is a strong, funny,
biting, very
human play! Way up the ladder. Thomas Wolfe was wrong.
Peter
Miller
Amazing . . . you speak the
truth, right
into my heart, deep down inside, places I have been, places I am, and
some
places I hope to never be!
Nick
DeFriez
I was so moved by your play.
At times, art
transforms the very personal into a truth intensely personal to others.
For me
your play was a fearless work of art. . . . I'm grateful for your
courage in
writing it, and honored to have seen it.
Amy
Rahn
Thank you for the gift of your writing and your capacity and generosity in putting such a difficult yet (often) common subject into honest words and acts.
I broke into
tears with the last few words, but left with that honest purged
feeling--not to
be confused with the feeling of being a sucker to bathos. . . . I've
recommended your play to all my friends. There is something in it for
everyone.
Stephanie
Herrick
The totally
amazing thing about last night is that even though moments were so
intense as to be physically daunting from a second-row vantage point;
even though tears flowed not once but twice; even though the ending
connected me to my own pain as one of my dearest friends who is being
taken from me and her many loved ones through dementia; even with all
of that power and challenge, today I am not sad. I found lightness and a sense
of peace after an evening spent swimming through the muck of the
blues. This is a monumental achievement. Thank you, David.
Caro Thompson
Thank you for A
Song for My Father. It touched
me so much. . . .
Linda
Radtke
While watching your play I
thought a lot
about the roots of drama and literature and how primal our need for
them
is. This was
especially poignant for me
when Randy has his mother and father act out a scene within the play. I loved how the mother was
invited into the
space of the play, to exist there with the son and enlisted in the
project of
reconstructing and interpreting the past.
And the complexities of the father and son relationship,
their love and
resentments were rendered beautifully and without the glaze of
sentimentality .
. . . And the actors were wonderful. Hats off to you on having written
such a
compelling work!
Zelda
Alpern
I
thought it was superb. . . .We were all very moved. Are there plans for
a
production in
Robert
Barasch
The play [is] a
powerful encounter with life events that many of us have experienced. .
. . In
a fine and deftly calibrated way, and through exquisite acting, the
play
enables us to face such a sitz
im leben
without blinking. . . in
facing that situation straight on. . . . Thank you for tending to the
common
ventures, in the life of common people.
Jack
Bremer
The
play successfully communicates something honest and moving about both
pain and
enduring love in even the most conflicted family relationships. . .
this play
speaks to something common in all our experience.
Keith
Alan Deutsch
. . . I was also
interested in the audience's response, which was always varied and
diverse.
This came out strongest in the hospital scenes, where the audience was
divided
between those who had experienced such a scene in their own lives, . .
. or had
never been through it. Some found comedy . . . gasped or moaned in sad
recognition (no comedy for them), others I think were bestilled by the
closeness to home in their current . . .
situation.
The overall
dynamic between child and parent, the baggage carried from childhood
into
adulthood, . . . was strongly written, and the actors carried it well.
I loved
the diversity within the characters -- not black and white, but complex.
My
dad wondered at how much of what we saw was autobiographical. I
suggested that
whether or not it was the writer's autobiography, it is clearly a
collective
autobiography . . . .
. .
. What has been most interesting [since seeing the play] is the number
of conversations, thoughtful, serious and reflective, that I have had
with several people. Thank you for the power of your words and
emotions. All of us who experienced the play came away with more than
we brought.
I
thought your play was very powerful. I was not alone. One lady I talked
with the day after I saw the play said she got as far as her car and
burst into tears. . . . the 2nd act was uncanny in its accuracy . . .
[it] made me cringe as it should have.
* * * * *
The World Premier Production
Directed
by Andrew
Doe
Featuring:
John Alexander, Tara Lee Downs,
Robert
Nuner & Ruth Wallman
*
* * * *
SYNOPSIS OF THE PLAY
A SONG FOR MY FATHER is a
memory play inside the mind and heart of Randy
Wolf, Frank Wolf's son. It takes place in
Act I begins shortly after
Frank has entered a nursing home. Then
through a series of scenes and conversations which are flashbacks to
before
Randy's mother, Ruth, died, to when Randy was in college, to Randy's
early
childhood, and including an actual knockdown, drag-out fight at the end
of Act
I, Frank and Randy confront the past, how irritable and angry they are
with
each other and how much they love each other.
Act II begins with Randy's
visit to meet his father's new bride, Ivy.
The remainder of Act II takes place in a nursing home.
A SONG FOR MY FATHER is about
growing old and dying, Frank's loneliness
and Randy's guilt. It's about men and women, the meaning of marriage,
class-consciousness
in
A SONG FOR MY FATHER is about
a father and son and about the attachments
and conflicts between them and how time and education separate them.
Second
Production this Summer
Old
Castle Theatre Company,
August
20 - September 5
for information contact:
Last updated: 6/13/2010