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By Liam Otten
March 9, 2004
October
1992. St. Louis and the nation await the Clinton-Bush-Perot presidential
debate at Washington University. An estranged mother and son reunite
for perhaps the last time at a fading St. Louis icon.
The stage is set for Kid Peculiar at the
Coral Court Motel, by Carter W. Lewis, playwright-in-residence
in the Performing Arts Department (PAD) in Arts & Sciences. The
St. Louis-based tragi-comedy commissioned by the as part
of the university's 150th anniversary celebration will make
its world premiere March 25-28 in the A.E. Hotchner Studio Theatre.
(It's a busy weekend for Lewis. His While
We Were Bowling also will debut March 26 for a month-long run
at the Studio Arena Theatre in Buffalo, N.Y.)
Performances of Kid Peculiar will begin
at 8 p.m. Thursday and Friday, March 25 and 26; at 2 p.m. and 8
p.m. Saturday, March 27; and at 2 p.m. Sunday, March 28. Tickets
are $12 for the general public and $8 for senior citizens and Washington
University faculty, staff and students.
Tickets are available through the Edison Theatre
Box Office, (314) 935-6543, and all MetroTix outlets. The A.E. Hotchner
Studio Theatre is located in Room 208, Mallinckrodt Student Center,
6445 Forsyth Blvd. For more information, call (314) 935-6543.
Kid Peculiar explores the relationship
between Madeline (senior Tracey Kaplan), an expatriate St. Louisan
who is now chief administrator for the Commission on Presidential
Debates; and Stamp (senior Brian Golden), her estranged teenage
son. The play is set entirely in a room at the Coral Court Motel,
the Route 66 motor inn that, with the dawn of the interstate freeway
system, grew notorious locally as a "no-tell motel" before its destruction
in 1995.
"Stamp
was conceived during a night at the Coral Court when Madeline was
17," Lewis explains. "The pregnancy sort of trapped her back then
but eventually she got out of St. Louis and moved to D.C., leaving
Stamp to be raised by her mother and father. She's been in and out
of his life, but its kind of a ritual that each time she comes to
town they meet, get to know each other a little bit better, find
out where the other one is, then go away again.
"Madeline and Stamp have a kind of smart, snappy,
mother-and-son repartee between them, but this night is a touch
different," Lewis adds. "Madeline is getting ready for her third
attempt at marriage. She's mellowing in a way, looking for something
calmer, happier, more consistent, and she's interrupted this crazy,
chaotic time to tell Stamp."
Stamp, meanwhile, "is very bright but doesn't
fit in at high school," Lewis continues. "He's looking to disrupt
things in some way. If his life is not going to change, he is looking
for something that will push it, ignite it, alter its course. And
he's brought pills and a gun."
Director and artist-in-residence Andrea Urice
who directed Lewis' American Storm in 2002
describes Kid Peculiar as "a bit of an emotional roller coaster.
You cannot call it a comedy, you cannot call it a drama. As with
all Carter's plays, it's a healthy dose of both. He can be very
funny, but ultimately the story moves into deeper and more difficult
places, because Stamp and Madeline have had a complicated relationship."
Lewis was drawn to the Coral Court, formerly
7755 Watson Road, for its colorful history and aura of shabby grandeur.
Built in the 1940s and '50s, the Streamline Moderne-style motor
inn initially catered to families, returning veterans and truck
drivers, but became infamous locally (and even nationally) as a
"monument to adultery," with short rental periods and private garages
that hid cars from view. One old joke holds that half of South St.
Louis was conceived at the Coral Court.
"The Coral Court has a kind of mythological
status," Lewis explains. "Everyone either has stories about it or
knows people who have stories. Families stayed there, celebrities
stayed there, murders happened there, people had affairs
and it's on Route 66, which adds another kind of romance."
Lewis also points out that, though Kid Peculiar
was commissioned for the university's sesquicentennial, he didn't
intend to write a history play or a "founding of Washington University"
play. Instead, he sought to adapt St. Louis settings and events
into a story that touched on larger themes, especially the parent-child
relationship and its sometimes-unacknowledged difficulties and strains.
"I wanted to write about the effect of wanting
to be loved and not quite being loved enough," Lewis concludes.
"Particularly from the child's point of view, there's that salt-and-pepper
mixture of love and hate. You strike out to get their attention,
when what you want most is to draw closer."
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