How It's Irish: Origin Theatre Company was founded by Limerick-man George C. Heslin; the company also presents the 1st Irish Festival. Director David Sullivan also directed Irish playwright Ronan Noon'es The Atheist Off-Broadway, and while I wasn't that keen on Noone's Little Black Dress (our review is here); there's no doubt he's a significant writer.
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| Kevin Melendez (Michael Priest) |
Ivan and the Dogs is based on the true story of Ivan Mishukov, a four-year old child who runs away from a dangerously abusive home in Russia and lives on the streets for two years, taken in by a kindly pack of dogs. He learns to speak dog, and finds that dog's humanity to him far outstrips that of human beings to themselves or to animals, if by humanity we mean things like "compassion, fair dealings, kindness."
And [SPOILER ALERT] I'll just warn you now that while there is no happy ending for the dogs, you can relax for most of the play about them. Nobody eats them. At least, not onstage. [SPOILER OVER]
So good is Melendez that although he's the only one onstage I could swear he conjured up the dogs, and that I've seen an image of Belka, the white lovely dog with sad, hungry eyes who is a little boy's idea of Mother and Heaven rolled into one.
Naylor's play has been nominated for an Olivier, and was apparently originally conceived as a radio play. But it works so well as a physical piece of work that it's hard to imagine that radio could do anything but diminish it.
It's a simple enough story, but it has all the genuine horror and magic of a Grimm's fairy tale. Ivan tells us that it was a cold winter, that mothers and fathers needed to get rid of anything that needed to eat, drink, or be kept warm. First the dogs are taken to the other side of the city and left. Then some begin to take the children. This couldn't be more like the beginning of "Hansel and Gretel" if it tried.
Melendez speaks in a Russian accent, a choice that is out of fashion but works very well (it's become the fashion not to use accents in a one-character drama, or if everyone has the same one-- there's a logic to it but it rarely actually works. See, for example, how the main character in Tom Stoppard's Rock and Roll has a Czech accent in England and no accent in Prague; this is supposed to signify when he's speaking his own language or not, but in practice, most audience members it was an actor's mistake). To call Ivan "precocious" is an understatement; his thoughts and coping skills seem far beyond what a four year old could possibly be capable of, but it's possible. And apparently it happened.
It's an older Ivan who is talking to us, anyway, but he recalls his observations with an innocent purity that is completely touching. We're in Yeltsin's Russia, where gangsters rule the Wild East and runaways sniff glue to keep warm, or steal potatoes from drunks. How four-year old Ivan knows what a gangster is I'm not quite sure, but I went with it. Handsome and strained looking in a printed sweatshirt (costume design by Stephanie Nichols), Melendez jumps effortlessly back and forth between his narration and embodying his story. Early on, after Ivan has run away, everyone is hostile to him. Ivan to be the only person in the entire universe who expects kindness and seeks it in others-- and I wondered how much more of this I could take.
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| Kevin Melendez (Michael Priest) |
Melendez turns in an extraordinary, haunting performance. I've found myself going back to the moment when he barks at Belka outside the den and she barks back. "It's a good bark," Ivan tells us, looking up. And it is. Melendez convincingly delivers a whole vocabulary of barks of these hero dogs. There isn't a whole lot of humor in the play, but I did like a moment later on, after Ivan has been adopted, when he scorns a housedog who never growls or barks.
David Sullivan's direction neatly sews the present and the past together. Sound designer/Composer Joel Diamond helps fill this world, with truly frightening slams and effects. Ivan's future looks like a reasonably good one, adopted by a decent seeming person. Animal lovers will not be surprised that when it comes to survival, dogs behave better than people. Why do we say "It's a dog eat dog world" when we mean it's a "people stomp on people world?" (do dogs eat dogs?). But it's satisfying to see the fundamental Goodness of Dogs represented here anyway, and it becomes, somehow, a way of reclaiming humanity too. Just don't go see it too soon after seeing War Horse. You've been warned.
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Ivan and the Dogs plays Thursday-Saturday through May 28, 9 pm, The Players Loft Theatre, 115 Macdougal Street, NYC Tickets are $25, are available by phone at 212/352-3101 or online at theatermania.
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p.s. for great writing from a dog's eye view, check out Merrill Markoe's Nose Down, Eyes Up, and anything else she writes. The "uh oh" factor doesn't apply in books, for some reason, and this one is a laugh out loud treat.


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