Role Playing: Brad Armacost switched brothers to do blind, boozy character in ‘The Seafarer’
Interview: Actor portrays an exuberant drunk, blind but perceptive, in Seanachai Theatre’s stellar take on Conor McPherson’s play through Feb. 1
By Lawrence B. Johnson
Brad Armacost’s earthy, funny and deceptively nuanced portrait of the blind, drunken brother of a lost soul in Conor McPherson’s “The Seafarer” was shaped in part, he says, by a blessing and a curse. How Irish that both circumstances should spring from the same source.
Armacost’s performance as the devoutly plastered Richard Harkin, in Seanachai Theatre’s brilliant go at “The Seafarer,” is his second pass at the play in recent Chicago seasons: He played Richard’s troubled younger brother Sharky, what one might call the passive protagonist, at Steppenwolf in 2009. Now Armacost moves – I should say expands — into the role of Richard, recently blinded but manipulative by long practice, as if the part were written for him.
“Actually, it’s the first time I ever portrayed blind,” says Armacost. “That’s easy enough – you learn to sense where sound is coming from, avoid eye contact. The fascinating part is the psychology behind Richard’s blindness, and the metaphor in it. Justice is blind, and there’s the tradition of the blind prophet. Richard ‘sees’ a great deal.
“But on the other side of this dramatic equation, there’s the matter of grace, which is something you don’t earn – it’s just given to you for reasons you can never comprehend. Richard is completely blind to how he treats Sharky (played here by Dan Waller), who has been a failure at everything. Yet there is grace. As long as the sun comes up, there’s a need for grace. The play could end as a dark Irish tragedy with you leaving the theater under a cloud. As it is, there’s some hope for Sharky.”
The play is set on Christmas Eve in a dumpy Irish home shared by Richard and Sharky, the latter a ne’er-do-well of many trades, a taciturn man prone to violence and not less partial to hard drinking than his more gregarious brother. But on this night Sharky, recently returned home after losing yet another job, is not drinking. Indeed, he’s been off the stuff for a couple of days.
This Christmas Eve the lads are joined by a couple of friends and a stranger who calls himself Mr. Lockhart. Whenever the others are out of the room, Mr. Lockhart (Kevin Theis) presses Sharky about an old debt he has come to collect: the hapless man’s soul. Mr. Lockhart, it appears, is none other than the devil himself.
If the subdued, rather mysterious Sharky compels our sympathy, it is the mirthful Richard, whose every third thought is of the bottle, that commands the eye – and Armacost is a riotous drunk.
“There’s a delightful description (in the play) of how Richard was blinded when he fell into a dumpster diving for wallpaper. Wallpaper! Of course, he was jarred (Irish slang for drunk). We even thought of having some rolls of wallpaper lying around, but that would have lent veracity to his tale!
“I’m goofily in love with all things Irish, even though I’m Scottish and French. And though I’ve lived in Chicagoland, I can relate to Richard’s wistful description of how that part of Dublin has changed for him. He remembers how it used to be all farms and fields. He’s looking back at the good old times through rose-colored glasses. Sharky was wonderful, everything was great. Let’s drink ourselves back to all that. Richard loves sitting around with a bunch of people who enjoy their drink.”
This mad fondness for libation finds voice, as Armacost puts it, “in lines left and right.” One member of the Christmas Eve revels, Ivan (Ira Amyx), drunk to stupefaction, has a repertoire of explanations for why one can’t simply walk out of a pub instead of getting sloshed.
“There’s one for the road,” notes Armacost, “but then birds never flew on one wing. And Ivan says when people were offering him Christmas pints, ‘I couldn’t see who it was to say no. What would you do?’”
In this alcoholic haze, Armacost sees Richard, not Sharky, as the one on life’s short leash, Mr. Lockhart’s threats notwithstanding, and believes Richard is alarmed by his younger brother’s quiet intimations of new personal strength.
“You could play the relationship between Richard and Sharky without an arc, with Richard as irascible at the end as at the beginning,” he says. “Richard keeps telling Sharky he’s being unreasonable: ‘You’re supposed to take my abuse.’ But in the end, he gets really insistent that Sharky not leave. He’s come to see Sharky as a different person, and their relationship as evolving. That’s alarming. There’s an expression: ‘Listen to a person when they’re being manipulative: The truth is in that.’”
Yet it is Richard, the blind seer, who has Mr. Lockhart’s number, the actor says.
“Richard plies Lockhart with drink. That’s his M.O. He doesn’t trust the guy. All the while, he knows there’s a funny smell off him. I have a friend, a priest, who once told me, ‘Hope dies last.’ That’s the beauty of this play.”
Related Links:
- Review of ‘The Seafarer’: Read it at ChicagoOntheAisle.com
- Review of Brian Friel’s ‘Faith Healer’ with Brad Armacost at The Den: Read it at ChicagoOntheAisle.com
More Role Playing Interviews:
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- Darrell W. Cox sees theater’s core in closed-off teacher of ‘Burning Boy’
- Chaon Cross turned Court stage into a romper room finding answers in ‘Proof’
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- Kamal Angelo Bolden sharpened dramatic combinations to play ‘The Opponent’
- In wheelchair, Jacqueline Grandt explores paralysis of neglect in ‘Broken Glass’
- James Ridge thrives in cold skin of Shakespeare’s smiling serpent, Richard III
- Stephen Ouimette brews an Irish tippler with a glassful of illusions in ‘Iceman’
- Ian Barford revels in the wiliness of an ambivalent rebel in Doctorow’s ‘March’
- Chuck Spencer flashes a badge of moral courage in Arthur Miller’s ‘The Price’
- Rebecca Finnegan finds lyrical heart of a lonely woman in ‘A Catered Affair’
- Bill Norris pulled the seedy bum in ‘The Caretaker” from a place within himself
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- Dean Evans, in clown costume, enters the darkness of ‘Burning Bluebeard’
- Dan Waller wields a personal brush as uneasy genius of ‘Pitmen Painters’
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- Brent Barrett is glad he joined ‘Follies’ as that womanizing, empty cad Ben
- Sadieh Rifai zips among seven characters in one-woman “Amish Project”
- Kirsten Fitzgerald inhabits sorrow, surfs the laughs in ‘Clybourne Park‘
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Tags: Brad Armacost, Conor McPherson, Dan Waller, Ira Amyx, Seanachai Theatre, The Seafarer
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