NEW YORK, NY.- Whats unnerving about Everythings Fine is how breezy the tone is: The story at the center of Douglas McGraths solo autobiographical show, set during his youth in Texas, is one of emotional and psychological distress, after all. McGrath is not exactly making fun of what happened, but hes not not making fun of it, either. It is hard to tell whether this is a deliberate choice abetted by John Lithgows direction or if McGrath is not a crafty enough performer to shake off a naturally avuncular demeanor.
But the droll tone is effective, if sometimes startling. And while McGrath may not be a superlative actor, he is a good storyteller he is best known as the screenwriter and director of Emma (1996), and he wrote the Tony-nominated book for Beautiful: The Carole King Musical. His account of something that happened to him as a teenager unfurls with the cant-look-away quality of a slow-motion crash. You might be appalled but laughing, eager to hear what happened next while also dreading it.
McGrath, 64, grew up in Midland, a wind-ridden town in West Texas where many people moved to work in the oil and gas industry. Such was the case for his father, a Connecticut-raised Princetonian with the deluxe name Raynsford Searle McGrath, whose family included a witty wife and their three children, of which Doug, as he was known, was the eldest.
McGrath sets up the scene evocatively, and for a little while, it looks as if the show will be a cozy family tale. His father had worn a glass eye since a terrible accident when he was 10, and his mother, Beatrice, had worked at Harpers Bazaar magazine alongside Diana Vreeland and an upstart Andy Warhol. McGrath could have easily milked an entire evening out of his urbane parents living in the wilds of Texas.
The focus, however, eventually tightens on eighth grade. Doug was 14, and a new history teacher, whom he calls Mrs. Malenkov, entered the picture. This married 47-year-old mother took a liking to him, to put it mildly, and started leaving notes written on blue onionskin paper in his locker. (John Lee Beattys set evokes a schoolroom looking half-abandoned and a little desperate.)
Those were different times, and a 14-year-old boy from the early 1970s was not like our modern teenagers constantly plugged into the illuminating world of the internet. But even by the standards of his time, McGrath paints a portrait of himself as being a little slow on the uptake. I was not precocious, he says. I was barely coscious.
Yet even the innocent, happy-go-lucky Doug realized that Mrs. Malenkov was not well and that the situation was untenable. When he finally came up with a way to extricate himself from his predicament, the scheme was equally laughable and cringe inducing.
As our narrator, McGrath is, of course, aware he is navigating a minefield, and he does so adroitly and without judgment if anything, he makes fun of himself the most and looks at Mrs. Malenkov in a perplexed, sensitive manner. He acknowledges the impropriety of what he is dealing with, recreating his feelings as he experienced them in the heat of the moment and as an adult looking back. But this also means that McGrath picks whatever point of view suits the storys suspenseful unfolding, and its not always coherent. Sometimes he editorializes with the wisdom he has now, and sometimes he is content to remain locked in his adolescent perspective, which means ignoring glaring blind spots. What was Mrs. Malenkovs husband up to, for example?
Songs like Teachers Pet and Come On-a My House play between some scenes a little on the nose, too, setting up easy chuckles. Which does not mean they are entirely comfortable.
Everythings Fine
Through Jan. 22 at the DR2 Theater, Manhattan; everythingsfineplay.com. Running time: 1 hour 30 minutes.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.