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{"id":9762,"date":"2019-09-15T01:00:13","date_gmt":"2019-09-15T08:00:13","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/martinezgazette.com\/?p=9762"},"modified":"2019-09-19T14:16:19","modified_gmt":"2019-09-19T21:16:19","slug":"camping-with-henry-and-tom-a-tightly-crafted-character-study-at-the-campbell-theater","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/martinezgazette.com\/camping-with-henry-and-tom-a-tightly-crafted-character-study-at-the-campbell-theater\/","title":{"rendered":"\u2018Camping With Henry and Tom\u2019 a tightly crafted character study at the Campbell Theater"},"content":{"rendered":"

By SCOTT BABA<\/strong>
\nArt and Entertainment Editor<\/em><\/p>\n

\"Wayne<\/a>
Henry Ford (Wayne McRice), Thomas Edison (Gary Mutz), and President Warren Harding (Mark Hinds) argue while lost in the woods in ‘Camping With Henry and Tom.’ (JAMIE JOBB \/ Courtesy)<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

In television there is a narrative device called the \u201cbottle episode.\u201d Originally conceived of as a way to cut costs, a bottle episode usually involves finding a way to keep the characters in a single location and giving them little to do besides bounce off of one another. Over time, bottle episodes have come to be seen as a way to distill characters and their relationships and explore them in a more in-depth way \u2013 by trapping the characters in one place and stripping them of distractions and external influences, there is nothing for the characters to react to but each other, and no tools for them to use but themselves.<\/p>\n

Onstage Theatre\u2019s new play at the Martinez Campbell Theater, \u201cCamping With Henry and Tom,\u201d is as pure and well-crafted a bottle episode as you\u2019re likely to see.<\/p>\n

Written by Mark St. Germain and directed by Randy Anger, the play is set during a real event that took place in 1921, when President Warren Harding (Mark Hinds) joined industrialist Henry Ford (Wayne McRice) and inventor Thomas Edison (Gary Mutz) on one of their regular well-publicized camping trips. Though the camping trip is a matter of historical record, St. Germain\u2019s play imagines what might have happened if the three men had gone on a secret car ride in the woods and accidentally stranded themselves after hitting a deer with Ford\u2019s car.<\/p>\n

The entire play takes place in the clearing they find themselves in after crashing the car. As they debate how to proceed, whether to go for help or wait for it, and what to do about the injured deer, each character comes into focus.<\/p>\n

Harding is a good man and a kind one, but perhaps too soft to be able to make the hard choices \u2013 when the three men agree to put the injured deer out of its misery, Harding goes to do the deed and then realizes he doesn\u2019t have it in him to kill an animal.<\/p>\n

Hinds shows his range with the roll, depicting Harding as both the friendly but distant presidential figure at the start of the play, and the more nuanced, more conflicted man who emerges from his shell later after the conversation takes a more combative turn.<\/p>\n

Ford is brash and ambitious, and it emerges early on in the play that his entire reason for inviting the president on this trip is to coerce him into making a number of concessions, like selling the failing Muscle Shoals hydroelectric plant to Ford for pennies. While Ford is an industrialist and a capitalist, he is also an idealist, and believes that industry can \u2013 and should \u2013 be bent to the betterment of the country, and that he\u2019s the man to do the bending.<\/p>\n

McRice plays him as a man full of ambition and pride and empty of patience. Though he nailed the puffed-up ostentation of the character, McRice said he had a difficult time crafting the character.<\/p>\n

\u201cI found it pretty difficult to bring this guy to life on the stage,\u201d said McRice. \u201cI did the part about 25 years ago. But this time, now that I\u2019m older, I did a lot more research, and what I discovered is: I don\u2019t really like Henry Ford. He was not a particularly likable person. But I can\u2019t possibly let that show through when I\u2019m playing the character.\u201d<\/p>\n

Edison, meanwhile, desires staunchly to stay out of the political conversation \u2013 and indeed, most of the conversation. He\u2019s gruff and asocial, and largely uninterested in interacting with his companions, mostly lobbing witty observations from over the top of his book.<\/p>\n

Mutz said that he connected with the character.<\/p>\n

\u201cHe\u2019s one of the few characters who seem so close to me, because every time I talk about it with my wife, she says, \u2018That is you, isn\u2019t it? You just sit there, you\u2019re curmudgeonly, and you throw out these one-liners at everybody.\u2019\u201d<\/p>\n

There is not much in the way of physical action. Instead, as with most great bottle episodes, the heart of the episode is the back and forth conversational brawl. Ego grapples with ego, as does philosophies about leadership and governance, and as the play continues and deeper goals are revealed, the play becomes an exploration of the darker side of ambition and politics.<\/p>\n

Though the play is almost entirely taken up with conversation, it never feels bogged down and is carried well by St. Germain\u2019s dialogue, which is quick and natural and full of dry wit.<\/p>\n

Director Randy Anger said that he understood the challenge of directing the conversation-heavy play.<\/p>\n

\u201cThis show could be three people sitting in their chairs for two hours, and while you want to get them up and get them moving, you have to make it real.,\u201d said Anger. \u201cYou have to make it so that when they stand up, and when they cross somewhere, and when they\u2019re turning on someone, that it looks right and it doesn\u2019t look like you\u2019ve created a moment out of thin air. It\u2019s really about motivation.\u201d<\/p>\n

Anger added that part of the solution was making sure the actors and their characters were very distinct. \u201cYou have to make sure that each one is very specific so you know that you don\u2019t have three men of a certain age all acting the same and sounding the same. You have to make sure their timbre is different, you have to make sure their attitudes are clear \u2013 you have to let them play.\u201d<\/p>\n

There are obvious parallels between the characters on the stage and the current political climate. From Harding\u2019s good-natured inability to get things done, to Ford\u2019s belief as an outsider businessman that he \u2013 and only he \u2013 knows the right way to fix the country, the play is shockingly topical for something written over 20 years ago.<\/p>\n

Mark Hinds, who originally brought the play to Onstage, said that its topicality was one of the things that interested him in putting on the play.<\/p>\n

\u201cIt takes place a hundred years ago and yet it\u2019s still relevant today,\u201d said Hinds. \u201cThis is a very interesting glimpse into the past and an intriguing look at how times may change, but politics does not.\u201d<\/p>\n

\u201cCamping With Henry and Tom\u201d is a smart, funny, thoughtful character study that\u2019s worth a watch.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"

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