Savage, War-Era ‘Streamers’ Focuses on Conflicts Within
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Playwright David Rabe specializes in capturing people in extremis. Like bugs impaled on pins, Rabe’s characters struggle on the tip of eviscerating catastrophe.
In “Streamers,” Rabe’s Vietnam-era play, now at the Hudson, the pain extends beyond personal travail to national cataclysm. Unlike the self-inflicted mayhem suffered by the lowlifes in Rabe’s “Hurlyburly,” who really do have the moral capacity of bugs, the pitiable personae of “Streamers” are swept up in a cascade of uncontrollable events that impel them toward tragedy.
The action is set in a U.S. Army training camp in 1965. For the most part, the young servicemen at the camp--some conscripts, some volunteers--have joined the Army expecting a normal peacetime stint. Now, they’re hanging around killing time before being shipped en masse to an obscure little country called Vietnam. And the news from there is not good.
In a savage, unstinting staging, Michael Arabian captures the tensions that result when a diverse group of men, from inner-city blacks to effete urban homosexuals to corn-fed heartland boys, are pushed together in claustrophobic living quarters, then subjected to prolonged boredom, terror and uncertainty. Moments of high humor notwithstanding, this is relentless stuff, rendered by a tight cadre of exceptional performers. Particularly noteworthy are Shawn Woods as a strutting, volatile gang youth who erupts into violence, and Jonathan Breck as the clean-cut, doomed innocent who bears the brunt of his rage.
BE THERE
“Streamers,” Hudson Backstage, 6537 Santa Monica Blvd., Hollywood. Thursdays-Saturdays, 8 p.m.; Sundays, 7 p.m. Ends March 7. $20. (323) 856-4200. Running time: 2 hours, 20 minutes.