The New York Times
February 7, 2006
THEATER REVIEW | 'ELLIOT, A SOLDIER'S FUGUE'
3 Generations of Soldiers' Stories in a Melancholy Key
By PHOEBE HOBAN
"Elliot, a Soldier's Fugue" is that rare and rewarding thing: a theater
work that succeeds on every level, while creating something new. The playwright,
Quiara Alegría Hudes, who has degrees in music (a bachelor's from Yale)
and playwriting (a master's from Brown), combines a lyrical ear with a sophisticated
sense of structure to trace the legacy of war through three generations of a
Puerto Rican family.
Ms. Hudes, whose heritage is Puerto Rican/Jewish, is only 28, but she already
possesses a confident and arresting voice that has garnered her several prestigious
awards. That voice is in finely tuned form in "Elliot," at the Culture
Project, which true to its title is composed like a fugue, with several strands
of narrative playing in point and counterpoint around a single theme: a soldier's
personal experience of war.
Thus we have Elliot, a 19-year-old marine just back from Iraq with a Purple
Heart, recalling in intimate detail his first kill and the paralyzing pain of
a serious leg wound; his father, little George, or Pop, who fought in Vietnam
and was also hospitalized with a leg wound, remembering his first encounter
with Nurse Ginny, who later becomes his wife; and Grandpop (also George), a
Korean War veteran, describing Bach fugues and playing the flute for his platoon:
"Minor key, it's melancholy, it's like the back of the woman you love as
she walks away from you. Major key, well, that's more simple, like how the sun
rises."
The original tone and tempo of the play are immediately established as the unseen
Elliott is evoked by his grandfather (poignantly played by Mateo Gómez);
his passionate gardener mother, Ginny (beautifully acted by Zabryna Guevara);
and his father (depicted with tragicomic flair by Triney Sandoval). Then Elliot
himself appears, stripped down to a towel, a deceptively simple G.I. Joe, portrayed
with perfect pitch by Armando Riesco.
At 70 minutes without intermission, "Elliot," directed by Davis McCallum,
is written and performed with musical economy and precision. (And indeed, the
musical motif extends into the drama itself: one element linking all three soldiers
is the flute passed down by Grandpop.)
As the play unfolds, the individual and overlapping voices weave a vivid web
of images: from the night-goggle green of a dead Viet cong soldier's blood to
the deliberate wildness of Ginny's garden ("When your son goes to war,
you plant every goddamn seed you can find. It doesn't matter what the seed is.
So long as it grows"); from the silver-garbed splendor of Elliot's prom
night to Pop's days in infantry in Dong Ha, searching for body parts.
The simple set works beautifully to frame the characters' narrative skeins.
A lush green garden wall, complete with hose and watering can, serves as the
backdrop to a sunken circle bordered by several benches and wood planking, a
sort of spare patio area that provides ample space for the actors to wander
as they unravel their war stories.
Without ever invoking current politics, "Elliot, a Soldier's Fugue,"
manages to be a deeply poetic, touching and often funny indictment of the war
in Iraq.
"Elliot, a Soldier's Fugue" runs through Feb. 19 at 45 Below at the
Culture Project, 45 Bleecker Street; (212)352-3101.