Mitch Hara / Mutant Olive / Photo by Ed Krieger |
MUTANT OLIVE
written and performed by Mitch Hara
For any actor to tackle a one person show is admirable. It’s like walking a tight wire without
a net and wire walking is what Mitch Hara is doing for an hour and a
half currently at the Lounge on Santa Monica Boulevard. That the venue is on Santa Monica is
significant, even though some of his story takes place a couple of miles to the west in
the heart of WeHo. The Lounge is an intimate little space of about fifty seats. The old brick walls are bare with a
long black velour up right that provides for an off stage area, though Hara, as
his alter ego Adam Astra, actually enters from the lobby as though presenting
himself for an audition for Death of a Salesman. Breaking the fourth wall, he engages in immediate
audience interaction by asking a lady in the front row to take his
photo ‘to remember the moment in case he actually gets the part.’ This presents
a strange dichotomy of discomfort and luring the audience into his bizarre world.
Bulk of the show turns on the title: Mutant Olive (He was forced to wear an olive green suit as a kid). We hear how Astra was raised by
wolverines, the unkind, but apparently accurate description of his parents. His portrayal of his drunken and
abusive father and distracted mother, the whore, startles and wears a little
thin, but the wirewalking is cleverly directed by Terri Hanauer. The bare bones stage: one ladder, five
boxes, three folding chairs, create Astra’s home, his mother’s boudoir, an encounter
group, a dramatic car wreck that winds from Santa Monica Boulevard to Robertson
through alleys to Melrose where all hell breaks loose and a hospital where an
out of body experience reminds slightly of Angels in America.
Hara’s movements are stereotypically gay as he tries again
and again to present his “pizza delivery boy” rendition of Puck in a Midsummer
Night’s Dream. His impressive mime
is smooth as silk, as he dances his various characters throughout the
piece.
Performing such intimate autobiographical material is daring
and for the most part works.
Recounting a drunken blackout on stage at the Matrix in David Rabe’s Hurly
Burly and his rendering of a believable out of body experience make the
sometimes overly profane and indulgent moments worth waiting through. This is deep digging, at times a one
person pity party that over all might work even better with some judicious
cutting.
Mutant Olive written
and performed by Mitch Hara
LOUNGE THEATRE
6201 Santa Monica Blvd.
Hollywood CA 90038
(corner El Centro, one block east of Vine)
6201 Santa Monica Blvd.
Hollywood CA 90038
(corner El Centro, one block east of Vine)
Thursday, Friday and Saturday at 8PM
Through
February 28, 2015
Tickets and
Information:
323 960 7861
www.plays411.com/mutant
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