Beginning the End

It’s clear to one of them. They are done for. Finished. Extinct

   “Us and the whooping cranes,†Tom says near the end of Jason Miller’s play, “That Championship Season.â€

   “On the way out,†he tells his old buddies.  Like the cranes, they are losing habitat, losing numbers.

   And of the five men on stage, only Tom (Jim Beaudin) — drunk, acerbic, incautious — can say it. Or see it.

   Aglet Theatre’s staged reading of this Pulitzer - and Tony award-winning play, at TriArts’ Bok Gallery, Saturday, started uncertainly. But it wound up smart and sharp: a jab at our dark side, at an American obsession with winning no matter what; of summoning enough hate and guile to come in first; to cripple, if necessary, the opposition.    

   This play opened on Broadway in 1972, the year of the Watergate break in, the opening gambit to secure another win for President Richard Nixon.

   Miller’s play centers on a dying coach and four players of his championship team 20 years earlier. Macey Levin plays the manipulative old bigot with serene assurance. Together, Coach tells his “boys,†they can beat Sharman the Jew and anyone else who would try and steal the mayoral election from George (Charlie Tirrell), one of the players on that championship team.

   The long, boozy evening  reveals terrible truths. And each character: Tom, the alcoholic writer; George, who would be mayor again; James (Andrew Joffe), who figures George can’t win, but he could; and Phil (Matt Neely), who means to back the opposition candidate to protect his own interests, break ranks. But Coach prevails. For a time.

   Once again, Aglet brings us a play of consequence, one that tells us a lot about American theater and American life.      

        — Marsden Epworth

 Incidentally, “That Championship Season†is to be revived on Broadway in March with Chris Noth, Kiefer Sutherland and Jason Patric — the son of the playwright who died in 2001.

   

   Aglet will be presenting Harold Pinter’s “The Collection†this spring, followed by Horton Foote’s “The Carpetbagger’s Children.†For information, www.aglettheatre.net.

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