An American All-Nighter for Kimberly Scott
by Stephanie Jones | March 9, 2012“Not everyone is happy when they see this play. We’ve had walkouts,” says Kimberly Scott, referring to her previous performances in American Night: The Ballad of Juan José, opening Sunday at Kirk Douglas Theatre in Culver City.
“We had walkouts in San Diego [at La Jolla Playhouse, last month]. We had a walkout in Ashland [during the play's 2010 premiere at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival].” The Ashland stage was in a thrust configuration, with spectators on three sides, but one front-row theatergoer exclaimed “‘This is bullshit!”, Scott reports, and “stood up, walked away, and walked out. And you have to cross the playing area! We were like, ‘Hey! Bye!’ …I was kind of shocked but my colleagues, my more-adept-at-improv colleagues, they handled it in a great way.”
In Richard Montoya’s play, Juan José crams for his citizenship test during an all-nighter that turns into a session of complicated truths, harsh realities, and sometimes not-so-easy-to-take satire.
“It’s a dream. It’s Juan José’s dream. And the thing I love best about it is the fact that it is as crazy and contradictory and amorphous and unpredictable as what this country is,” says Scott, who plays a variety of roles. “Bono [from U2] says America is an idea, and I agree with it to a great extent. It’s an idea and Juan José’s dream is really all the things that are coming ““ that are percolating in his mind and in his heart as he’s about to take this test ““ and really looking at in a funny, yet profound way, ‘What does it mean to become an American? What does it mean to become a citizen of this country? What are we taking on?’ We kind of all buy into the milk and the honey of it. We all buy into the freedom of it, the American Dream, and the life, liberty, and justice for all and what that means in this country.”
But Juan José learns that American history didn’t happen overnight.
“Juan José is a realist,” Scott says. He understands that many of America’s greatest ideals are works in progress — closer to dreams than to accomplished goals. “He really recognizes that from the very beginning.” So he’s not surprised that these ideals and dreams are sometimes “contradictory with the craziness he experiences coming to this country, how he has to sneak in, all the hoops he has to jump through to become a legal citizen ““ not somebody who wants to stay here [illegally]. He wants to legally go through all the [hoops]. He wants to absolutely follow the rules of a legal, law-abiding American citizen and everything that it means and entails. That’s a can of worms. That’s big stuff!”
Co-produced here by Center Theatre Group with La Jolla Playhouse, the play was written by Richard Montoya, developed by Jo Bonney and Culture Clash and directed by Bonney. Scott plays various roles from Ben Franklin to a woman at a town hall meeting. But perhaps her most prominent role is a Texan, Viola Pettus — an African American nurse who assisted victims of whatever race or ethnicity during the 1918 flu pandemic, even helping a Ku Klux Klansman. Scott had never heard of her before becoming involved in Montoya’s play.
“I feel so fortunate to be able to play Viola Pettus because I’m from Texas. I didn’t know who she was. Culture Clash does their research. They’re amazing at that!” says Scott. “Texas is one of those states — I should say it is the state — that is really profoundly hopped up on its own history. Profoundly. It’s a law that you have to take Texas history in the schools, but their version of history [is] the part that they want you to see… History and reality, when it’s cut that much and tampered with instead of being taught…with a more balanced view ““ it’s like a drug. You can make people believe that something is true that isn’t.”
The production shows José grappling with inhumanity and racial prejudice — but with a few laughs along the way, true to the nature of Culture Clash.
Scott used to have the same manager as Culture Clash, “and for years I was just kind of agog at the nerve they had to stand onstage and say some of the things that they said…in two different languages!” Culture Clash’s productions, she adds, have “something for everyone” — from someone who’s as “mainstream, homogenous and American as you can get, to someone who is new to this country, to someone who has a sense of that larger world, to someone who is very much in their own bubble. That was exciting to begin with, because they do so much research and I knew I would learn a lot about performing in front of a lot of different audiences with a broad cultural range. That’s always exciting to me.” The walkouts arise from “equal opportunity offending thrown in for good measure.”
A theater junkie

Robin Goodrin Nordli and Kimberly Scott in SCR's "The Further Adventures of Hedda Gabler", Photo by Jenny Graham; Kimberly Scott and Charles Dutton in Yale Repertory Theatre's 2009 production of "Death of a Salesman"
Scott enjoys creating roles in new plays, as she has with American Night. She was nominated for a Tony in 1988 for August Wilson’s Joe Turner’s Come and Gone, and she created the role of Mammy in The Further Adventures of Hedda Gabler at South Coast Repertory. Yet she also participated in the 1991 Oskar Eustis-helmed modern dress staging of Julius Caesar at the Mark Taper Forum, played the Stage Manager in an Our Town at South Coast in 1998, and in 2009 she portrayed Linda Loman opposite Charles Dutton’s Willy in an all-black Death of a Salesman at Yale Repertory Theatre. She also played many film and TV roles over the years, but recently she decided to concentrate on theater.
“I’m a theater junkie. I’m a theater geek. I had to admit that to myself after 25 years, doing film and television for so long,” says Scott. “I’ve loved the work that I’ve done in the past, but I had to admit to myself that I love theater the most after my Dad died. I was like ““ daylight’s burning. This really is a finite existence we have right now. Whatever your belief is ““ this life has a beginning, a middle, and an end. I realized, ‘Oh, I have to do what I really want to do.’ So, I just stopped turning down theater.”
American Night has a stellar cast with Rene Millan as Juan José, Terri McMahon, Rodney Gardiner, David Kelly, Culture Clash’s Herbert Siguenza, Stephanie Beatriz, and Daisuke Tsuji.
“I cannot tell you enough good things about Rene Millan. It’s inspiring to be onstage with him and watch what he does as Juan José, the heart he brings to this man, just little things that he does that just break my heart,” says Scott. “There are moments when I go, “˜Oh yeah, I’m acting. I have to act.’ You’re just watching him do what he’s doing. It’s lovely, it’s so lovely.”
Montoya’s script was the first project in Oregon Shakespeare Festival’s American Revolutions: The United States History Cycle — which is planned eventually to include 37 new plays. According to Scott, the play resonates with an audience particularly well during a politically charged year such as 2012.
“I think it hits the things that people don’t know about. It hits a lot of what’s resonant politically and emotionally, so far as the zeitgeist of the country right now. There are the headlines in the news [and] what’s in people’s hearts,” says Scott. “I think that what we can do is address what’s in people’s hearts and serve the American dream in that way. Everyone’s dream, not just the corporate dream ““ yes, I’m a lefty. A big ol’ liberal! We have to take care of each other. Every time I’m onstage I try to encourage people. My thing is to engage, enlighten and to encourage people in a way that helps them get on with their day and their life, in the hope that it expands their view of the world a little. “
American Night also requires the audience to think outside the box in a way that makes room for what’s happening inside the (black) box.
“The great thing about theater is that it’s a black box and anything is possible inside in a theater onstage. And we’re asking them [the audience] to suspend their own disbelief. I think that we’re at a point now where — as theater makers, as play makers, as artists, as actors ““- we have to take on these roles, these characters, and tell these stories. We have to suspend our own disbelief in what the audience can take, what the audience can see, what’s possible.”

Dakin Matthews, Lisa Banes, Doug Hutchinson, Kimberly Scott and Kenny Ransom in a scene from the Mark Taper Forum's 1991 production of "Julius Caesar"; Photo by Jay Thompson
Scott has had a great time playing so many varied roles — a wench, a queen, a pirate, and others — in three seasons at Oregon Shakespeare, and she will return there in June for As You Like It {as Charles the Wrestler) and the premiere of Party People (Universes’ new play about the evolution of the Black Panthers and the Young Lords — it’s another installation in the American Revolutions cycle). She hopes the history cycle and OSF can expand people’s notions of not only what can be said onstage but who she as well as other actors can be.
“I want to be able to play something other than a housemaid,” says Scott. “I’m not ashamed of my cultural heritage. I’m not ashamed of the fact that my mother cleaned houses at one point in her life, but she also worked at a credit union later on. I want to be able to play different things.
“As much as I love playing Ben Franklin, I love being able to play a queen, one of Shakespeare’s queens. I love being able to play one of Shakespeare’s wenches. I love being able to play men. I love being able to play the trouser roles in Shakespeare ““ a man in a contemporary play. I think it’s an inside-out job. In order to change perception and change the audience’s expectation, we have to change what we’re willing to be able to do. We have to expand the notion of what’s possible for us to play. And we sometimes have to say ‘no.’”
Regardless of the occasional walkout, Scott expects that most theatergoers will find something of interest in American Night. “You can come with an open mind or not, it doesn’t make any difference,” she says. “Even if you come with a closed mind, you’ll have a good time and you’ll enjoy yourself.”
American Night: The Ballad of Juan José, , co-produced by Center Theatre Group and La Jolla Playhouse. Opens March 11. Plays Tues-Fri 8 pm; Sat 2 pm and 8 pm; Sun 1 pm and 6:30 pm. Through April 1. Tickets: $20-45. Kirk Douglas Theatre, 9820 Washington Blvd., Culver City. 213-628-2772. www.CenterTheatreGroup.org.
***All American Night: The Ballad of Juan José production photos by Craig Schwartz
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