You might be
forgiven for thinking that Nathan Lane was shot out of a
cannon when the curtain rises on November,
David Mamet's maniacally funny new comedy now producing
waves of laughter at Broadway's Ethel Barrymore
Theatre.
Lane explodes
across the set -- which happens to be the Oval Office of
the president of the United States. The actor plays the
chief executive, a volatile fellow with the
deceptively bland name of Charles Smith. Lane is
anything but bland as he ricochets around the room, spewing
obscenities, mostly of the f word variety. After all,
this is a play by the man who wrote Glengarry Glen
Ross and American Buffalo.
Things aren't
going well for Smith's reelection campaign. Contributions
have dried up. Even his staff expects defeat as Election Day
draws near. Heck, his speechwriter has written a
concession speech. And now there isn't enough money
for television advertising or, worse, Smith's
presidential library. What's a president without his own
sturdy repository of record?
The man needs
money and thinks he can find it in turkeys -- specifically,
the bird the president pardons each year around
Thanksgiving. There may be payments from the National
Association of Turkey Manufacturers. In fact, a
representative of the group is here to see the president,
along with two birds awaiting reprieve from the dinner
table. Can a deal be made? As the president says, at
one point during the evening, ''Everybody wants
something.''
That, more or
less, sets up the cleverly jumbled plot, which demands
comic actors at the top of their form. The cast, which also
includes Laurie Metcalf and Dylan Baker, deftly
navigates its way through the thicket of laughs,
nailing every one.
November shares a keen sense of political
incorrectness with Romance, Mamet's last foray
into farce, seen at off-Broadway's Atlantic Theater Company
in 2005. In Romance the playwright gleefully
skewered the judicial system during a madcap trial.
Here, the
corruption of politics and power takes center stage. Mamet
is careful not to make his chief executive resemble
any specific president, although Mamet most likely
would not be too upset if you found some similarities
with the current occupant of the White House.
Lane has always
been a master of the slow burn and then kaboom.
High-strung is his specialty. He gets to display a lot of
outrage here. Baker, as a practical presidential
assistant, offers superb support, ably setting up
Lane's choicest moments of hilarity.
The plot
percolates with the arrival of Smith's speechwriter
(Metcalf), a lesbian who has just returned from China
with a new baby and who wants to marry her partner in
the White House. Without giving away too much, let's
just say deals are struck.
Smith is the
ultimate manipulator, a symbol of the times, according to
Mamet, willing to do a deal with anyone to get reelected.
Turkeys are not the half of it.
Director Joe
Mantello keeps this merry-go-round of self-preservation
moving as fast as possible on designer Scott Pask's
realistic presidential set. Two supporting players,
Ethan Phillips as a turkey lobbyist and Michael
Nichols as an avenging Native American, jump into the
fray without missing a beat.
The play ends
abruptly -- almost too quickly. It says something about
November -- and maybe the state of the nation --
that its swift conclusion makes you yearn for a little more.
(AP)