I went into the Lower Depth Theatre Ensemble’s
production of Pure Confidence by Carlyle Brown very nearly blind. Didn’t know the company, so felt eager to see
something by them. Knew next-to-nothing
of the subject matter, save it had something to do with race relations—and evidently
(from the poster) the Civil War as well as horse-racing. But I like for plays and their performers
speak for themselves.
Turned out to be a lot of good things this
production had to say.
Horse-racing and slave jockeys in the antebellum
South. A subject about which I knew
nothing. What I saw in the play gave me
a glimpse seriously at odds with what I thought I knew in general—mostly about
how slaves might buy their freedom in what became of the Confederacy. Frankly in most states it nearly (sometimes
literally) took an act of the state legislature to allow any slave to go free,
no matter what. Was Kentucky really that
different? How delightful if so!
The play centers around Simon Cato (Armond Edward Dorsey), a hugely
successful slave jockey, and Colonel Wiley Johnson (William Salvers) who owned not Simon but the horse Pure Confidence
upon which Simon won so many great races, rising to what we would call
superstardom. The two enjoy each other’s
company, are friends even. Finally Simon
makes the Colonel a proposal—that he purchase Simon and then Simon will buy
himself from his share in the winnings (the Colonel regularly shared such
winnings, in the play a not uncommon practice to encourage jockeys). Despite genuine fondness for him, the Colonel
proves reluctant. So the cunning jockey
hatches a plan, one with the help of Mattie (Deborah Puette), the Colonel’s wife.
Along the way, Simon meets Caroline (Tamarra Graham), Mattie’s personal maid,
and plots to buy her as well—with her consent, marriage in mind.
Now, you might think the shenanigans of Simon to get
himself free would emerge as the heart of the play’s story. In fact it proves a subplot, one that
all-but-vanishes before the end of the first act—and, not coincidentally, the arrival
of the Civil War. A gap of nearly two
decades takes place before act two, when these four find themselves re-united
under an odd set of circumstances. Some
bitterness, some fondness, some hope and some humiliation lies in store for
them all. We watch all this, having
gotten to like and care for them. One of
the highest praises I can offer to playwright, cast and director Marya Mazor
must be that all four come across as extremely human, each growing with time as
well as needing some more growing at play’s end, each having gained and lost a
lot. Their cross purposes and sometimes
genuinely bad behavior comes across as human, understandable, forgiveable. All good!
More than good!
And yet I left feeling the drama pulled its punch
several times. Perhaps the playwright
deliberately chose to do that. For all I
know they felt that essential to what they were aiming for. Without doubt the actual story of these four
characters works, because we engage with them and end wishing them the
best. Yet the real and present dangers
which would have surrounded them never really come on stage. Simon and Caroline enjoy extremely exalted
status as slaves in the slave-holding South, with the reality of other slaves
simply never impinging on the lives of anyone in the play—only mentioned as
something unpleasant a couple of times.
In fact the whole outside world never really seems to exist much. Not only the viciousness of slavery for most,
but the rampant fear and rage boiling over as events in 1860-61 turned into a
long, extremely bloody war. Likewise the
second act didn’t really offer much of genuine context, which robbed all those
scenes of some genuine poignancy (and kudos for everyone in achieving so much
as they did).
But I kept wondering where was the meat amid this
very nice dramatic meal of fruits, vegetables and some very good sweets? Where was the blood, at least
metaphorically? If we are to see the
real friendships of these four compelling and interesting characters as vivid
and special, where is the context to show how special? How very extraordinary? Frankly, without that the play reminds me of
the excuses I heard growing up in the Deep South in the 1960s and 70s, about
how much slaves were cared for by their Masters, about how terrible freedom
proved for the slaves, about how much more racist and uncivilized the Union was
compared to the Confederacy. That felt
jarring.
Yet—again, because it bears repeating—the play’s
story engaged me. The characters touched
my heart, with affection if not love or passion. I cared about events taking place before me,
and quite simply the actors did a magnificent job (especially Graham, who
frankly had the least to work with among the leads) with such uniform quality I
cannot but praise director Mayzor.
I must also note when I finally got around to
reading the program, something became clear as clearest air—this play does not
in any way represent an actual telling of real history, despite the fact Simon
Cato was a real man and did indeed rise to the top of his profession. Which is
fine. Congrats on making me believe for
a time it did!
PureConfidence
plays 8pm on Fridays and Saturdays, 3pm on Sundays until April 30, 2017 at the Sacred
Fools ‘Black Box’ Theatre, 1076 Lillian Way, Los Angeles, CA 90038.
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