By Cynthia Citron
On paper it looks pretty interesting. On stage, not so much.
The Arab-Israeli Cookbook, a new play by Robin Soans, is built around the
idea that when people break bread together they can somehow engage in reasonable
dialogue. Or, to put it another way, it's hard to holler when your mouth
is full.
In aid of this premise, ten actors, playing some 35 parts, roam around a
colorful set actually cooking onstage. And the dialogue consists of actual
recipes, interspersed with personal tales of terrorism and war in the Middle
East. Spoken by all the usual suspects: a wealthy widow from New York who
has made Aliyah to Israel---"if you don't go, they've won," she says;
an Arab mother who is proud of her martyred son; a young student who has
witnessed a terrorist attack on a restaurant patronized by both Jews and Arabs;
an elderly Christian couple marooned in their apartment, afraid to go out on the
street. The stories are true, recorded verbatim by the playwright, and
even though the actors do a wonderful job of relating them, the tales lack a
certain poignancy. We have heard them before, and the static recitation
renders them as fables, rather than as moving real-life experiences.
"Uncertainty is a cruel and debilitating weapon," one of the
characters notes. And maybe because the lines are so clearly and immutably
drawn in this play---there is no uncertainty in the dialogue or in the
implacable opinions of the players---there are no surprises. Thus, the
weapons are made of rubber, not steel, and don't deliver any wounds that reach
below the surface.
It was not the author's intention to deliver wounds, however. He wanted,
he says, to deliver a dialogue that was free from polemics. "Everyone
in the Middle East is passionate about food," he says, "and if they
were talking about food it would stop them getting propagandist." So
even as they stuff zucchini and grape leaves onstage ("Arabs love to stuff
everything," the food preparer notes), and make hummus and falafel and
canafa (a pizza-like dessert topped with goat cheese and pistachios), giving us
their recipes as they go, they also tell us their stories. Which, as I've
already noted, lose poignancy when they are accompanied by the acrid fumes of
frying veal.
The Arab-Israeli Cookbook is a novel idea. Unfortunately, it isn't
a play. It lacks suspense, resolution, climax, or change. And even
polemics, as the playwright planned. But maybe polemics might have
enlivened the proceedings and instigated some lively debate. So that the
audience would have something to discuss afterwards, as they adjourned for their
after-theatre coffee and cake. As it is now, what they've got is goulash.
The Arab-Israeli Cookbook is directed by Louis Fantasia. It
will be running at the MET Theatre, 1089 Oxford Avenue, in Hollywood
through June 26th.
|