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“Gatz” Exposes Elite Deceit in Fitzgerald Masterpiece, at Berkeley Rep

“Gatz” Exposes Elite Deceit in Fitzgerald Masterpiece, at Berkeley Rep

February 19, 2020 Barry David Horwitz

John Collins Makes Stage Magic with The Great Gatsby

by Barry David Horwitz

“Gatz” has everything—love, passion, party, class conflict, car culture, and self-involvement. F. Scott Fitzgerald’s scandalous party animals are speeding down the road, running red lights, leaving the rest of us dead in the road. Director John Collins reimagines the novel as a stunning modern parable.

New York-based Elevator Repair Service has been performing “Gatz” for ten years all over the world. At last we have a chance to see and hear their six-hour marathon for ourselves at Berkeley Rep, so there’s plenty of time for its greatness to grow…. and grow….

By the end, we are hooked, tearful, and amazed at their genius, as they read and act every word of Fitzgerald’s 1925 novel The Great Gatsby.

We lose ourselves in the grey-green 80s office we see onstage. Subtle Scott Shepherd plays a downtrodden office worker, who finds the novel in his desk drawer, and starts reading it out loud—to us. In his crowded office, complete with broken computer, high metal shelves full of files and boxes, and a glassed-in corridor, the reading turns into a spectacle.

Scott Shepherd reading The Great Gatsby. Photo by Steven Gunther

Artfully, Shepherd draws out the sounds and the music of Fitzgerald’s revelation of the Jazz Age. Shepherd breaks into Midwestern and Brooklyn accents, making the naive narrator Nick Carraway immediate and thrilling.

One by one, his twelve nameless co-workers look over his shoulder, and take on other roles. It’s amazing to watch as actor Susie Sokol becomes Jordan Baker, the cheating golf pro.  Hard-working Laurena Allan turns into sexy Myrtle Wilson, the demanding working-class girlfriend.

Soon everyone is playing multiple roles. The boss, Jim Fletcher, coolly embodies an aloof, pink-suited Gatsby. Wearing blue overalls, Frank Boyd slouches in as office tech guy and then becomes exploited car mechanic George Wilson. The superb staging transforms the Jazz Age characters into magical comedy and satire.

Scott Shepherd and ensemble in “Gatz.” Photo by Ian Douglas

They are re-living the Roaring Twenties, an age of self-indulgence, runaway stock market, and jazzy music—in the Roaring Eighties. But in “Gatz,” Tom and Daisy Buchanan (Robert M. Johanson and Annie McNamara) act more middle class and self-pitying than Fitzgerald’s millionaires.

In Gatsby, the ultra-rich live in the old mansion across Long Island Sound from Jay Gatsby’s newer, flashy white palace. Gatsby stands for extreme idealism and comic optimism—but he cannot compete with ruthless Old Money. Gatsby thinks he can still win back wavering Daisy from brutal Tom after all these years.

Jim Fletcher as Jay Gatsby. Photo by Steven Gunther

But it’s too late, the clock won’t run backwards. Director Collins’ “Gatz” proves that the green breast of the New World has been violated.  Nick Carraway, the greenhorn Wall Street bond-trader and midwestern refugee, cannot make peace with rampant lies and deceptions.

Yes, it’s Prohibition, so they drink like alley cats. Yes, women are revered or destroyed, so Tom slugs his mistress Myrtle, breaking her nose. “Gatz” brilliantly parallels Jazz Age extravagance with 80s greed.  All our history is there—from post-war WWI profiteering to Reagan’s turn to oligarchy.

No wonder poor Nick must go back to the Midwest—who can stand up to that elite self-delusion, lying, and cheating? Nick knows that the Crash is coming—join him for six hours of insight and laughter—a once in a lifetime trip!

 

“Gatz”— Text: The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, directed by John Collins, set designed by Louisa Thompson, at Berkeley Repertory Theatre, through Sunday, March 1, 2020. Info: berkeleyrep.org

Cast: Scott Shepherd, Jim Fletcher, Maggie Hoffman, Susie Sokol, Annie McNamara, Robert M. Johanson, Frank Boyd, Laurena Allan, Lindsay Hockaday, Vin Knight, Ben Jalosa Williams, Gavin Price, and Ross Fletcher.

Banner photo by Mark Barton: The Ensemble in Elevator Repair Service’s “Gatz.”


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Capitalism, comedy, exploitation, marriage, patriarchy, power, Satire, social class, women, workers

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