^Jortlanh (Obstruer A p ril 2, 2014 Page 17 Lorraine Han sherry’s Wisdom c o n t i n u e d f r o m page 11 tious work. The play is so far ahead of its time that I wonder if we are ready even now for the prophetic insight of Ms. Hansberry, so famously young, gifted, and black. But I'm grateful that the Oregon Shakespeare Festival has gone to the trouble to offer us this opportunity. Mounting this revival was no mean feat. There are several versions of the script in existence, including some edits and re w rite s c o m p le te d a fte r Hansberry's death by her ex-husband and collaborator, Robert Nemiroff, Di­ rector Juliette Carillo and her creative team carefully worked with the unwieldy collected text to capture Hansberry's intention and to hone the production to a story that will keep audiences engaged even as they are challenged. Those ef­ forts, including the work of a very fine and sensitive cast, have resulted in a production that hums with authenticity. It is an ambitious effort. Rather than remaining in the box created by her suc­ cess with "A Raisin in the Sun," Hansberry dared to write a play that reaches beyond black experience to depict a more expan­ sive range of perspectives, in service of a complex mix of ideas. Her protagonists are a Jewish intel­ lectual and his wife, Iris, living in Green­ wich Village in the early 1960s. Sidney is someone you might recog­ nize — a liberal intellectual who has acquired the tools for higher thought, but who frequently neglects to self-apply his insights. His marriage to Iris - an aspir­ ing actress who can't summon the cour­ age to audition - is full of wit and affection, but also with the merciless barbs they lob at each other. Iris, is a product of her time - intelligent and perceptive, but imprisoned within a lim­ ited set of options that affect her percep­ tion of herself. He vastly underestimates her - and she is losing patience with his penchant for pursuing ill-advised projects that ex­ ceed his resources and talent. Both seem immobilized, though the quality of Sidney's superior tone suggests that he would apply that description only to Iris. Nei­ ther can seem to light on a life purpose to commit to, and their commitment to their marriage is hampered by their illusions about each other. Their community exposes them to an array of intellectual perspectives. Their cynical upstairs neighbor, David, is a gay playwright who is closeted outside their circle. Another friend, Walter, is running an underdog campaign that purports to provide a clean alternative to dirty local politics. Alton, a light-skinned black man who passes as white, chides Sidney for his lack of political engagement. Alton is in love with Iris's younger sister Gloria, who he believes is a model but who Sidney and Iris know is a high-class call girl. Gloria is a heartbreaking mix of vulnerability, hope, and cynicism. Finally, Iris's older sister, Mavis, appears to be the most conven­ tional of the three sisters, dropping by to offer provincial comments and judgments that strike Sidney as naive and, occasion­ ally, dangerous. Part of what makes the play so won­ derful is that these characters are not just types, but believable, flawed human beings. Their struggles are presented deftly and with empathy — yet no one gets off easy. Each character has mo­ ments that illuminate genuine suffering - - shockingly clear and nuanced mo­ ments for 1964, and refreshingly so even for 2014. Yet each character also dis­ Sidney is rigid and often unlikable, and he plays small-minded impulses; each grasps undergoes a transformation late in the for primacy in whatever form, be it the play that is not entirely satisfying. The moral high ground or simply the power to conflicts in his marriage to Iris, too, are get one's own needs met at someone too thorny to find convincing resolution, else's expense. although the final act offers something This community of intellectuals - rela­ like one. tively accepting for 1964 - can con­ But the messiness in this play feels, verse about problems that occupy us for the most part, fitting. Hansberry, still, with a level of insight that at times remarkably for her time and for any seems enviable even to current ears. time, displays the courage of her convic­ Yet action consistent with their ideals tions. often eludes them. In the world of her play, intelligent, That anyone — let alone a black woman well-meaning people sometimes make in 1964 — dared to assemble this cast of decisions that add to the oppression of flawed characters and to struggle in others. It can happen because they are such a nuanced way with the problems distracted by their own oppression, or that occupy their existence is remark­ because they are closing their eyes to a able. But Hansberry attempted more. piece of what's true, or because they are Her play grapples with what it means to afraid to act at all. be human, to take a stand and attempt to Although the resolutions Hansberry contribute to positive change, even when chooses are not always satisfying, she one's efforts seem unsatisfying or futile. commits to them. As a playwright, she Each o f the characters struggles models a life of compassion toward dif­ uniquely with the problem of engage­ ference, an open-eyed commitment to ment - o f whether and how to aim for the struggle for truth. She eschews apa­ something, and of what balance to strike thy in favor of a struggle to live into one's b etw een an a ly sis and co u rag e o u s ideals even if the options one can see for agency. The mix of results is surprising. doing so feel unsatisfying. For example, Mavis, whose assess­ This Oregon Shakespeare Festival pro­ ments of others are chock full of con­ duction, which plays until July 3, offers a ventional stereotypes, nevertheless dis­ rich glimpse into the prophetic wisdom plays a remarkable capacity for nuance. of a true visionary. It's worth a trip to Compared to Sidney, Wally seems a Ashland this spring to enter Hansberry's man of action — but his articulation of world. (Visit osfashland.org for tickets how he subordinates his principles in the and moreinform ation.) name of expediency seems chillingly Darle en Ortega is a member of familiar. Meanwhile, Sidney and Iris are, the Oregon Shakespeare Festival by contrast, relatively stuck - and one Board of Directors. A judge on the can question whether their principles are Oregon Court o f Appeals, she is the too robust or too inflexible. first woman of color to serve in that Hansberry has no easy solution for capacity. Her movie review column these dilemmas - and that is both a Opinionated Judge appears regu­ strength of the play and a problem for it. larly in The Portland Observer. THE SPINA COLUMN TM An ongoing senes of questions and answers about Am ericas natural healing profession Part 26 KIDS AND CHIROPRACTIC As the twig is bent so grows the tree : I have re c e n tly n o ticed our specialty. trained and skilled at handling prob­ my son has one shoulder higher : I have been told that my child lems like that of your ch ild ’s. D on’t than the other. Could this be a sign of needs an operation for a curvature be fooled by the though of “w atch­ a problem in his spine? in her spine. Is there an alternative? ing the condition” either. W ithout A : G ood th in k in g , m om ! It A : You m ost d efin itely should proper assistance it w on’t go away. surely could. In fact having one have a thorough C hiropractic Offer your children the best in health shoulder higher than the other is a checkup on your child immediately. Spi­ care. Give them regular Chiropractic cardinal sign of curvature of the spine. nal surgery gets. All conservative ef­ checkups. As the twig is bent so According to Chiropractic research, forts at handling your ch ild ’s problem grows the tree! the earlier a curvature is caught, the should be considered before consent- higher the potential for success. To be ing to surgery. Our office is highly certain about health o f your child, call our office today for a professional spi­ nal evaluation. Spines (big or small) are 2124 NE Hancock, Portland Oregon 97212 • P h o n e : ( 5 0 3 ) 2 8 7 - 5 5 0 4 Q Dr. Billy R. Flowers 0 Flowers' Chiropractic Office