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BackStageWest
March 23, 2000
Reviewed by Kerry Reid
Let's
get this out of the way first: Michael Gene Sullivan does look
like Huey P. Newton. In fact, he once played the Minister of
Defense for the Black Panthers onstage-in Robert Alexander's
Servant of the People at Lorraine Hansberry Theatre, which I
never saw.
But this solo piece, which Sullivan has been developing locally
and on the Fringe circuit for the past few years, goes beyond
commenting on that coincidence. Mat Sullivan has set forth in
this engaging, intelligent, funny, occasional quite moving show
is a thumbnail sketch of growing up activist---and growing aware
of the cracks and flaws in the heroes of one's youth. We don't
necessarily learn a whole lot about Newton-and as Sullivan
enacts his frustrating search for material about the Panther in
bookstores and libraries, we realize that Huey's ignominious
death in a crack deal gone bad ha overshadowed his once
legendary revolutionary aura. But we learn a great deal about
Sullivan, and about how the radical influences of his childhood
have informed his subsequent work.
A longtime member of the San Francisco Mime Troupe, Sullivan
also frequently appears at A.C.T and on television. His life on
the tightrope of seeking success as an actor without losing his
political passion is one of the sub-themes interwoven into this
show-most clearly demarcated by his own Huey-like outbursts at
what he sees a.,, the willful ignorance and incompetence of
sonic of his colleagues on the Alexander show But what comes
through most clearly is a fervor- for a time when being an
activist was a good thing. Admirably, Sullivan makes this point
over and over again with wit, charm, and self deprecating grace.
He even makes an analogy between the acting styles of William
Shatner's 1960s-era Captain Kirk and the cool, contained Picard
of the techno-'80s. "Passionate times call for
overacting." Sullivan maintains.
He also offers a running series of tips for revolutionaries.
After an emotional recounting of Robert Kennedy's assassination
(Sullivan's mother was in the ballroom where it happened), he
muses: "Why is it our side never just gets wounded? Reagan
and Wallace got wounded. Here's a tip: Learn to duck."
Sullivan is ably directed by his wife and fellow Mime Trouper
Velina Brown on a spare, simple set, with nothing more than a
wooden desk and a screen with projections of Newton's image and
of agitprop paintings by Sullivan's mother. He moves with fluid
ease from a tender recounting of his father prepping them for
their first protest march (where even the family bunny played
its part) to a hilarious impersonation of an uptight Irish
schoolteacher, leading the audience/classroom in rousing
renditions of "My Country 'Tis of Thee" and
"Marching to Pretoria" (a songbook is helpfully
included with the program). Sullivan's recounting of the time a
cop pulled a gun on him as he sat in his own car is chilling,
particularly after the Amadou Diallo verdict. And seeing him
assume positions supine and supplicating during the incident
hammers home the ongoing humiliation faced by black men every
day-the humiliation that Newton addressed with ballsy courage,
conviction, and unblinking dedication.
Newton's
fall from grace has obviously left its mark on Sullivan. But as
he gently reminds us toward the end of the show, the important
thing is to "listen to the message and let the messenger be
human."
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