John
Proctor is the Villain
Review
of John Proctor is the Villain, a play by Kimberly Belflower
Huntington
Theatre, at the Calderwood Pavilion through March 10, 2024
Review By
Andy Hoffman
Setting
a show in a school brings up so many production problems. How do you maintain
the illusion of the adults playing kids and that the teacher/student power
dynamic has actual consequences? The Huntington Theatre shows how with John
Proctor is the Villain, tightly written by Kimberly Belflower and expertly
directed by Margot Bordelon. This production takes the audience right back into
high school. The actors dress and speak like teenagers and gallop awkwardly
around the stage as they would in a high-school classroom. From the scrunchies
on their wrists to the oddly knowing innocence, this cast has embraced their
younger selves. The young people connect to their identities through Billie
Eilish, Lorde, and Taylor Swift and they erupt into fits of laughter and
screaming as teens do. The young playwright went home to rural Georgia after
she completed her education and used the familiar location to channel her own
youth into this play. They completely brought the audience into their world, as
evidenced by the spontaneous standing ovation at the final curtain.
John
Proctor is the Villain is set in a small-town high school
in rural Georgia. The two faculty members we meet – English teacher Carter
Smith and guidance counselor Bailey Gallagher – both graduated from this school,
which creates an insular, even protected, environment for the rest of the characters,
all students. The play’s subject, gender relations, makes the realism of the
production even more powerful. We open in Mr. Smith’s English class, doubling as
the sex-education course due to a faculty shortage. Japhet Balaban comes across
as the incredibly cool and devoted teacher and he leads his students into the
unit on Arthur Miller’s The Crucible. He gives his students the standard
interpretation of the play, Miller’s indictment of anticommunist fervor played
as the Salem Witch Trials, in which John Proctor’s refusal to save himself by
impugning others seems heroic. The teenage girls in his class have a different
point of view about John Proctor’s character; the play tells us why.
Set
in the recent past, the students run squarely into political reality when they
want to start a school club to explore feminism, of particular interest in the
wake of the #metoo movement. The guidance counselor tries to break the news
that the community would likely object to their club, but Mr. Smith comes to
the rescue as both the faculty sponsor and with a different name that will
deflect rancor. The community context comes into the classroom in the
free-wheeling conversation among the club members, as when Beth, a
high-schooler who always apologizes for her opinions and the main instigator
for forming the club, confesses that she really thought of the club as a
Christian feminist organization. Her classmates are as baffled by this
perspective as the audience is. The church remains an offstage character
throughout the play, as membership and activity there stands in for upstanding
moral behavior. The play we see on the Calderwood stage unfolds like a parallel
commentary on the action of The Crucible, as the students fumble their
way to insight. Newcomer Nell, a Black student transferred from Atlanta, brings
her classmates a slightly more worldly perspective.
In
truth, they have plenty of worldliness among themselves. We learn early in the
play that Raelynn and Lee, a couple since the fourth grade, ran into an
explosive problem when Lee slept with Raelynn’s best friend Shelby, who
subsequently disappeared from school for half a year. Did Shelby become
pregnant? Did she have a breakdown? No one knows, especially not Raelynn, who
simultaneously hates and misses her bestie. The action of the play accelerates
to break-neck speed when Shelby returns unexpectedly. Her revelations turn the
school upside down and bring the action of The Crucible and the action
of John Proctor is the Villain into a duet. The exhilarating ending
brings out both the best in the cast and the audience. Join the standing
ovation at this exuberant performance.
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