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Robrt Pela: Arizona Theatre Company's 'Of Mice And Men' Does Not Disappoint

(Art by Esser Design, courtesy of Arizona Theatre Company)
The ATC production of "Of Mice and Men" runs through April 17.

I’ve been counting the weeks, all season, until Arizona Theatre Company’s production of John Steinbeck’s "Of Mice and Men." It opened on Saturday and runs through mid-April. Despite my anticipation I was not, for the most part, disappointed.

Steinbeck wrote the adaption of his 1937 novella that same year, when it opened on Broadway and played for more than 200 performances. The play has enjoyed a long history of New York and repertory revivals. Director Mark Clements finds the gentleness in Steinbeck’s cruel tale of George and Lennie, a pair of drifters with naive dreams for the future.

The grim misery of Depression-era migrant workers is neatly rendered by Clements’ excellent creative team. Todd Edward Ivins’ set design, moved to and fro by costumed, silhouetted ranch hands, provides a series of expertly cheerless settings— a ratty bunkhouse; a creepy flatland; a filthy barn - that amplify the players’ despair. Joe Cerqua’s sound design and scoring marry the desolation of a coyote’s howl with the sadness of a fiddle’s moan.

I had all season to forget actor Ken Heaton’s gorgeous performance as Lennie in Phoenix Theatre’s 1992 production, a performance that has stayed with me for a quarter-century. Scott Greer’s magnetic rendering of Steinbeck’s tragic, brain-damaged man-child certainly helped. As written, Lennie is all facial ticks and childlike hand gestures. Greer uses these, but emphasizes Lennie’s wide-eyed wonderment at everything he longs for.

Curley’s Wife is played by Clements’ wife, Kelley Faulkner. Her character is famously from Salinas, but the actress’s choice of whiney up-speak and summer stock posturings suggest Salinas by way of a West Covina little theater. Chike Johnson is quite fine as Crooks, a beleaguered Negro farmhand whose tightly controlled despair briefly spills out all over.

As George, Jonathan Wainwright is the quiet eye of Steinbeck’s storm. Handed pages of stage exposition, Wainwright finesses each recap with small sparks of nervous tension and enough charm to illuminate this famously sad and skillfully presented story.