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'HAND TO GOD' WRITER ROBERT ASKINS - TALKS ABOUT HIS PAL TYRONE

ASKINS SAYS HE "HATES PUPPET'S" - TYRONE IS THE CLASSIC TRICKSTER PUPPET AND ASKINS BRINGS THE CURRENT RAGE PUPPET TO LIFE IN HIS NEW PLAY

ROBERT ASKINS is a native of Texas, he was an unknown off Broadway writer before HAND TO GOD shot him to fame. He grew up in a very christian community and tells writer Sarah Rose Leonard - he didn’t want the Broadway fame - he wanted to be a Sam Shepard or David Mamet.

ASKINS EXPLAINS THE INSPIRATION

FOR HIS PAL TYRONE

I watched my two friends Steve and Geneva (from the original cast) together at a party and it was obvious watching these two actors what the play would be. She is his mother and starts F-ing his friend. Tim is based on a kid who was my best friend, who had a terrible relationship with his mother. He was a dick and a very unpleasant guy with his skater haircut and he wore all black and was cool for no reason.

I hate puppets. I was held back between kindergarten and first grade and the school shrink took a whole bunch us into a room and we could do a puppet show that was supposed to help us process our emotions. It was a puppet named Duso, and we had to sing to get him to talk and come out “Hey Duso come on out” and I hated it. I would think “STOP LYING TO ME” you are trying to give me a world that does not exist. We are in this F-ing country, like this f-ing Trump backlash is a lot of liberals who will not look at the fact that the darkness will not go away. Our storytelling has to get more rowdy “cause it is a f-ing rowdy time. Let’s stop pretending that we understand the world that we are in. The well-ordered stories of the past are insufficient to explain the now . (Robert Askins)

‘Hand to God’ channels Satan for fiery humor, vulgarity

BY MIYAKO SINGER | SENIOR STAFF THE DAILY CAL (UCB)

Situations escalate quickly in Berkeley Rep’s West Coast premiere of Robert Askins’ “Hand to God.” By the end of the 80-minute play, the cheery church basement where awkward, innocent Texan teenager Jason (Michael Doherty) has been guilt tripped into puppet ministry by his mother Margery (a manic Laura Odeh) gets destroyed — trashed, vandalized and drenched in human blood.

The puppet Jason decides to perform with is Tyrone: a fuzzy gray personified hand puppet with deceptively sweet googly eyes. Tyrone can sing “Jesus Loves Me,” perform a bit from “Who’s On First,” defile churches with the filthiest acts of puppet sex and rip human ears off with his teeth. The first two are Jason’s doing. The latter two are a little more complicated. Is Jason’s repressed grief and teenage lust manifesting itself through a puppet? Or could this be the work of Satan himself?

Jason is coping with his father’s death and his mother’s silence by turning to Tyrone for company and conversation. Doherty’s blinking, gawky Jason is absolutely heartbreaking and stunningly different from his simultaneously puppeteered Tyrone.

The way Doherty can keep Jason’s horror on his own face while Tyrone’s infernal stream of expletives comes out of the puppet’s mouth is this play’s truest miracle. It is almost a shame we get so little time with Jason, as Tyrone increasingly dominates his meek host and wreaks havoc on this little Texan church.

Margery is dealing with the loss of her husband by throwing herself into a church puppet ministry with wild-eyed zeal It’s like tossing a Mento into a Pepsi can and trying to screw the cap back on — it’s just a matter of time until it all blows up.

Everybody at the Lutheran church is a soda can waiting to explode too, and much of it has to do with Margery. Bad boy Timothy (Michael McIntire) is a horny, hormonal menace, showing up puppetless to puppet class, slouching angrily in the too-small plastic chairs and bullying everybody around him. When Margery asks him why he hates her so much, he declares that he’s in love with her. Timothy’s not the only one — Pastor Greg (a perfectly slimy David Kelly) has an ulterior motive when he lets Margery use the basement for her puppet show. He is also hoping Margery might fall into his open, empty arms. Jessica (Carolina Sanchez), the object of Jason’s affection and Tyrone’s lewd harassment, is the only well-adjusted person around.

While it is Doherty’s Jason who evokes the most intense response — a painful desire to hide under one’s seat until this sweet boy has stopped embarrassing himself — “Hand to God” is Margery’s story in equal measure. Odeh’s performance is louder than Doherty’s, more frenzied and theatrical, but it is still a moving depiction of a woman driven to wit’s end by grief and loneliness.

That gulf between righteous exteriors and interior messes is captured effectively, if straightforwardly, by Jo Winiarski’s bright elementary school classroom decor. Of course it’s an act of sex that finally shatters everyone’s last bits of reserve. When Margery gives into animal instinct with Timothy, all hell breaks loose. What ensues is enormously funny but perhaps not as subversive as Askins meant it to be. On a Berkeley stage, blasphemy, obscene language and the exposure of Christian hypocrisy doesn’t pack quite the same punch it would in a town more rooted to propriety and the Church.

Askins’ other overarching theme — the terrible, violent, gross things humans are capable of doing when freed from the constraints of society — is a little trite. “Hand to God” is saved from hints of college-sophomore-philosophy-major obviousness by its rip-roaring humor and the strength of its human portraits. David Ivers’ snappy direction also helps.

The play’s deep compassion is what raises it from “Lord of the Flies”-lite to something much higher. For “Hand to God,” its humanity is its salvation.

“Hand to God” at Berkeley Repertory Peets Theatre

Closes March 19th

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Miyako Singer covers theater The Daily Cal. Contact her at msinger@dailycal.org.


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