Michael Gotch in Daisy (Dawn Schaefer) |
Daisy
ACT Theatre
Through August
7, 2016
The very first “attack
television commercial” is now thought of as an iconic ad. It was created to
support LBJ’s first run for the presidency after becoming “the accidental president”
when Kennedy was shot. The commercial had a little girl pulling petals off a
daisy and counting them (upwardly) and then a countdown of some official sort
from 10 and a bomb exploding. It was meant to take advantage of people’s innate
fear of getting bombed and was supposed to make people fear Barry Goldwater –
the upstart Republican who many felt was extreme and rash.
That topic,
particularly when another rash Republican is running for election, now, is a
compelling and potentially fascinating idea. Playwright Sean Devine has been
working on a play, Daisy, for a
number of years and decided he would focus on the ad agency, itself, that
developed the concept and created the ad. They won awards for it, later, too
(the Cleo). That particular choice
might have undercut the ability to exploit the excitement of that topic…
This summer,
Devine had the opportunity to work on his script through our local Icicle Creek
New Play Festival. ACT Theatre decided to debut the play in their main stage
season, and it opened July 14th. The theme of the script is that of
the ethics of playing on people’s fears and whether it is manipulative and
wrong or just calling out something that already exists inside people.
The tensions of
that time were extremely high. The Vietnam War was not yet a “war,” yet events
there were heating up to a fever pitch. Civil rights tensions were also causing
riots. Children were being taught how to “duck and cover” in schools in case
bombs fell on them.
The table is set
for a lot of potential, here. However, the script falls short in delivering the
tension. It’s not clear exactly why, but there are some specifics that could be
pointed to. First of all, advertising is and always was predicated on
manipulating people’s emotions, “solving a need” they would say, or “finding
the pain and providing the solution.” It could have been useful to have the ad
agency folks acknowledge that before they start arguing about just one
particular commercial of manipulated content.
They do talk
about television as different, and it was still a novelty, there were still
only three essential stations and all people who watched had only those to
attend to, so there was a national cohesion that existed in a sort of vacuum of
any other history. But there had been movies for quite a while. The power of
the screened image to make people feel things was clear to many, already.
The script introduces
an agoraphobic sound engineer, a real man named Tony Schwartz, as the guy who
created the basic idea of that ad and perceived it as doing something good for
the world. Then there are competitive ad agency folks who essentially take
advantage of his distance as a consultant to take his idea and take the credit.
His monologues
about sound are the most particularly compelling parts of the script. But they
don’t actually propel the ethical argument. They demonstrate his specific
understanding of the power of sound, which is helpful overall. That point is lyrical and universal, so it’s
great to include it. However, we’re not led to any clarity about how sound
combines to help “trick” us emotionally, which I perceive is part of the point
of the overall theme.
The first act is
way overly long and full of the polemic of the “ethics” of developing an ad
that is not attacking the political content of the nominees but rather playing
on emotions of the voters. And it complicates by making a woman the main scold
to men who (including by implication President Johnson) have no wish to be
scolded.
This woman (a
hybrid-recognition that there were women at this ad agency that were “allowed”
to do similar work to men) is set up to be the ethical watchdog by the agency
head and then immediately undercut by the same man. It’s not clear that Mr.
Devine is aware that he’s done that. Then in the second act, this woman’s fear
of Goldwater makes her acquiesce to the making of this odious commercial so
quickly, after hating it, that it destroys the entire first sentiments.
I am not
mentioning the ACT Theatre makers of the play because I want the focus to be on
the subject area. Also, they don’t subsequently elevate the play so that it
works even if the script doesn’t, the way I wish they could have. They do a
serviceable job, though the projection work of Tristan Roberson is stellar.
But, while
Devine could not possibly have predicted that the 2016 similarities would be so
keen to 1964, there is a potent parallel. And the play focus could lead to
explosive emotions and much introspection, but unfortunately, it as yet does
not. Everything about the production and the script seems weirdly muted.
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