Theatrius Archive
  • Now Playing
  • All Reviews
  • Writers
  • Reflections
  • Millennial Notes
  • Join Us
  • About Us
  • Visit us on Instagram!
  • Search Icon

Theatrius Archive

Archive for Theatrius.com

“Bulrusher” Conjures Bold, Biblical, Boonville Magic—at Berkeley Rep

“Bulrusher” Conjures Bold, Biblical, Boonville Magic—at Berkeley Rep

November 5, 2023 Barry David Horwitz

Eisa Davis’ NorCal Tale Explores Isolation & Liberation

by Barry David Horwitz

A winding stream meanders along the stage where a dreaming girl communes with the Navarro River. Behind her looms the old Boonville hotel/brothel, with steep steps leading up to the women’s rooms.

Although it seems like Mark Twain’s America, it’s 1955, Mendocino County; and Bulrusher (Jordan Tyson) has spent her 18 years entirely in Boonville. Bulrusher is African and Native American, but her origins are shrouded in mystery. She has had no contact with the world outside and knows nothing about the new Civil Rights Movement.

The story goes that Schoolch (Jamie LaVerdiere) found Bulrusher floating down the river in a basket of reeds—like Moses. The teacher raised her in Boonville. Two others also keep a watchful eye on her: Madame (Shyla Lefner) and Logger (Joerge Bennett Watson), part of the rustic Northern California community.

Jeorge Bennett Watson (Logger), Shyla Lefner (Madame), Jamie LaVerdiere (Schoolch), and Rob Kellogg (Boy). Photos: T Charles Erickson

As Logger, Watson sparkles with wit and down-home humor, a formidable presence. Lefner’s Madame plays a harsh, Puritanical role, as a strict businesswoman. Bulrusher herself can read the future in water but she is anxious and angry—a world to herself.

The story seems Biblical, full of poetry and lyricism. Bulrusher sells oranges on the road, calling them “balls of sun.” They all use Boontling, the local dialect, with startling words for sex—including “burlap,” “comb’s getting red,”and  “cut cabbage.” Sexual repression is obvious, as suggestive words fly by in fast-moving countrified dialogue.

When Logger’s niece Vera (Cyndii Johnson) arrives from Birmingham, Alabama, she brings news of Civil Rights struggles. Vera explains the Civil Rights Movement, showing Bulrusher photos of Emmet Till’s tortured body. Logger and Vera, both African Americans, bring passion and power to the town that Time forgot.

Cyndii Johnson (Vera) & Jordan Tyson (Bulrusher)

When delightful Vera and Bulrusher cavort in the river, they become more than close friends. But later, their suspicious elders accuse them of “standing too close together.” Suppressed sexual desire lurks everywhere in remote Boonville. Robust country bumpkin Boy (Rob Kellog) announces suddenly that Bulrusher will now be his “girlfriend.”

The action takes place at Madame’s dark wooden “hotel” where men come to take their pleasure—though they take little pleasure in their sexuality. Madame presides, a feisty, tight-fisted brothel-keeper. Rule-bound Madame scrupulously avoids committing to either of her two suitors: lively Logger or up-tight Schoolch. Charming Logger reveals his feelings for Madame in his honest, brusque way of connecting to women.

In fact, all the characters in backwater Boonville spend a lot of time proclaiming their emotions, presenting them to the audience, rather than to each other—like a Biblical parable.

Rob Kellogg (Boy), Jeorge Bennett Watson (Logger), and Shyla Lefner (Madame). Photos: T Charles Erickson

Vera’s earthiness and Logger’s resilience become Bulrusher’s clue to grow as an African American woman.  They are the only Black people she has ever met. As her mentors, they help her envision a new, more equal world, after years of isolation and outright lies.

“Bulrusher” touches on so many themes: lesbian love, spiritual longings, and sexual stereotypes. There’s poetry, beauty, and hope in Eisa Davis’ lyrical fantasy of lost love and postponed redemption.

 

“Bulrusher” by Eisa Davis, directed by Nicole A. Watson, scenic design by Lawrence E. Moten III, costume design by Valerie St. Pierre Smith, lighting design by Sherrice Mojgani, projection design by Katherine Freer, by Berkeley Repertory Theatre, a co-production with McCarter Theatre Center. Info: berkelelyrep.org – to December 3, 2023.

Cast: Cyndii Johnson, Rob Kellogg. Jamie LaVerdiere, Shyla Lefner, Jordan Tyson, and Jeorge Bennett Watson.

Banner photo: Cyndii Johnson (Vera), Jeorge Bennett Watson (Logger), and Jordan Tyson (Bulrusher). Photos: T Charles Erickson


#BLM, #Lesbian, Plays, San Francisco
#BLM, Berkeley, Capitalism, Civil Rights, comedy, exploitation, Family, feminism, friendship, hope, Identity, justice, love, marriage, patriarchy, politics, poverty, power, race, racism, revolution, Romance, sex, social class, wit, women, Women's Rights, workers

Post navigation

NEXT
“we are continuous”: Brilliant, Heroic, Comic Coming Out—at NCTC
PREVIOUS
“The Allure of Thug Life” Exposes Oakland’s Opposed Worlds—at The Marsh
Comments are closed.

Menu

  • Now Playing
  • All Reviews
  • Writers
  • Reflections
  • Millennial Notes
  • Join Us
  • About Us
  • Visit us on Instagram!

BLM

Black Lives Matter

Current Shows

  • “What Is To Be Done?” Fights Depression & Fascism, Brilliantly—at The Marsh
  • “Twelfth Night or, What You Will” Highlights Our Humanity—at The Public
  • “The Tempest” Mixes Magic, Old Feuds, & New Love—at Marin Shakes
  • “The Return” Investigates Repression & War—at Golden Thread
  • “Some Things You Should Know About My Mom” Summons the 60s—at Exit
  • “Scat-ter Brain: The Music of ADHD” Celebrates Spontaneity—at The Marsh
  • “The Return” Reveals the Cost of Forbidden Love—at Golden Thread
  • “Home?”: Palestinian Woman Enacts Her Amazing Story, Brilliantly—at Z Space
  • “Jurassiq Parq, A Musiqal Parody”: A Wild Joy Ride!—at Oasis
  • “Night Driver”: Hong Kong Princess Navigates S.F. Queer Scene—at The Marsh
  • “The Magnolia Ballet”: A Bold, Black Father-Son Love Story—at Shotgun: Video to Sept. 6
  • “Les Blancs” Delivers the Truth about Colonialism—at OTP
  • “Execution of Justice” Exposes the ‘Twinkie’ Defense—at Chautauqua
  • “Les Blancs” Exposes Hypocrisy of Imperialism—at OTP
  • “Into the Breeches!”: Wartime Women Take Center Stage–at Masquers

About us:

If you want to see the best plays & performances around the San Francisco Bay or beyond, read our reviews. We promise to give you a true report on the best shows.
Bay Area Critics Circle

Barry David Horwitz, Editor of Theatrius, is a Voting Member of the San Francisco Bay Area Theatre Critics' Circle, SFBATCC.

© 2025   All Rights Reserved.