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TIME: Almanac 1995
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TIME Almanac 1995.iso
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<text id=92TT2622>
<title>
Nov. 23, 1992: Reviews:Theater
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
Nov. 23, 1992 God and Women
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
REVIEWS, Page 72
THEATER
Celebrating Gay Anger
</hdr><body>
<p>By WILLIAM A. HENRY III
</p>
<p> TITLE: ANGELS IN AMERICA
AUTHOR: Tony Kushner
WHERE: Mark Taper Forum, Los Angeles
</p>
<p> THE BOTTOM LINE: An AIDS epic dazzlingly blends sitcom,
the supernatural and the ghost of Roy Cohn.
</p>
<p> The central visual image of this season's most eagerly
awaited American play is a towering wall, like the facade of
some Greek Revival government colossus, with two jagged cracks
running from top to bottom. Before a word is spoken, this symbol
-- with its promise of that facade's eventually cracking wide
open -- conveys the aura of physical decay and revolutionary
social change that drives Tony Kushner's 7 1/2-hr. epic about
AIDS, gay liberation and the breakdown of the Reagan era's
sanctimonious hypocrisy.
</p>
<p> But if the imagery sums up the foundation-toppling
ideology of Angels in America, which last week won the Evening
Standard award as London's best play while an updated and
expanded version debuted in Los Angeles, it cannot begin to
suggest the playwright's wacky tactics -- the derisive humor,
uninhibited fantasy and freehand jumbling of the journalistic
and the supernatural that distinguish this raging farce from
lesser, if tidier, AIDS plays. Kushner takes a topic for a TV
mini-series and warps it into weirdly satisfying poetry.
</p>
<p> Kushner isn't much interested in promoting understanding
between gays and the straight world, as is fostered by the
current Broadway musical Falsettos. He certainly isn't
interested in autobiographical pain of the kind that Larry
Kramer so affectingly revisits in his off-Broadway drama The
Destiny of Me. He seems especially unsympathetic to closet cases
and bisexuals, as personified in a Mormon character whose
ambitions clash with his libido: the man's straight wife and gay
lover both cast him aside. Politically, Angels preaches to the
choir, celebrating gay anger and self-righteousness (to gleeful
whoops from the audience) rather than explaining gay angst to
the uninitiated. The author and the delighted spectators reflect
an evolution in attitude akin to what happened among blacks and
women: one generation sought empathy; the next demanded justice;
the generation equivalent to Kushner's just flat-out asserted
equality and spurned any more debate.
</p>
<p> At the center of a slender and increasingly metaphysical
plot are broken troths, gay and straight, and the socially rich
yet emotionally solitary life of Roy Cohn, the lawyer and
dealmaker who denied his homosexuality up to the moment of his
death from AIDS in 1986.
</p>
<p> Cohn is the ideal villain. He stole from clients. He
corrupted the political system. He illegally lobbied a judge to
secure the execution of Ethel Rosenberg (who haunts Cohn in his
dying days, then says the Kaddish over his corpse, ending with
a blasphemous but heartfelt "son of a bitch"). But for Kushner's
polemical purposes, Cohn's greatest evil was his willingness to
tolerate, in fact promote, discrimination against gays even as
he secretly enjoyed boundless gay sex. He is embodied with
robust humor and seductive malevolence by Kushner and actor Ron
Leibman, who make Cohn a villain-one-loves-to-hate, like Richard
III but slipperier and funnier. In the best passage, Cohn
asserts he is not a gay man at all but a heterosexual who sleeps
with men. Gays, he explains, know no one and have "zero clout."
</p>
<p> The other actors are bland, save for Cynthia Mace as the
Mormon's deranged wife, but her role starts at a mountaintop of
emotional frenzy and leaves her nowhere to go. As a gay man who
deserts a dying lover, Joe Mantello projects a nihilism far more
intriguing than Stephen Spinella's saintliness as the lover,
although Spinella has the almost unplayable task of being
visited by angels, ascending to heaven and returning to earth
-- alive despite two apparent death scenes -- to bless the
multitudes. Kushner has said the play's second half is two
drafts away from being done. He should focus on this character
and the banal finale if he wants to be poetically -- rather than
just politically -- correct.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>