Keith Huff’s A STEADY RAIN
Chicago Commercial Collective at Chicago Dramatists
Directed by Russ Tutterow
Scenic design by yours truly
Costume Design by Samantha Jones
Lighting Design by Jeff Pines
Sound Design by Mike Tutaj
THE STORY
Denny and Joey are lifelong friends. They grew up together
on Chicago’s near-northside, Denny often beating up the more tag-along Joey.
They went into the Chicago police force together, and have been partners ever
since. Denny’s got a wife, kids, -- the American dream, -- while Joey has had a
rougher personal stretch, playing out a lot of life inside a bottle. They are
typical beat-cops who never seem to be able to make it to “detective” rank, and
are steamed about it, but whatcha-gonna-do, eh?
Denny, as befits his personality, steps a little astride the
law sometimes, and doesn’t necessarily follow “the rulebook”, but you still
like the guy… more or less. One day he
smacks around a local druggie, who retaliates by firing a gun thru the front
window of Denny’s house, severely injuring Denny’s youngest son. This sends
Denny on a downward spiral of retribution and payback that bring Joey -- and
Denny’s family -- along with him. He obsesses about getting the druggie back,
to the exclusion of everything around him… his severely injured son, his
grieving wife, his partner who is trying to pull him back from the brink. He’s so focused on revenge, that one day… out
on the beat, his actions cause them to misunderstand a domestic disturbance,
and inadvertently turn a victim over to his (eventual) serial killer. This
mucked call brings down the weight of the Chicago Police and media down onto
them in the worst way, at the worst possible time, and they are both forced off
the Force. It seems the only way for one
of them to escape is for one of them to take the fall. Joey offers to to do
that since Denny has a family, but Denny’s pride make that plan impossible to
bear. This seeming injustice, breaks Denny further away from reality, and Denny
heads out after the druggie only to accidentally kill the druggie’s little
brother, and in the moment when he’s about to be arrested, turns the gun on the
druggie, in sight of other officers and kills him, point blank. Joey, now the
more mentally stable, is trying to hold it all together for Denny and Denny’s
family, but Denny’s wife is pulling away because she knows that Denny is in the
midst of something bad, and she falls into Joey’s arms seeking safety. Denny
bursts into their home, knowing that the Force is on the hunt for him, and begs
Joey to take care of his family when he’s gone, and to get them out of the
house.
Denny then commits suicide, and the epilogue speaks of how
Joey and Denny’s now-widow begin to build a life for themselves, and how Joey
realizes how and why Denny would do anything… anything for his family.
The play is structured as interlocking monologues with just
2 actors on a (mostly bare) set. Denny
and Joey each tell their sides of the story… presumably in an interrogation
room at their regular precinct… interrupting each other, and occasionally
moving into dialogue scenes between them… it’s VERY fluid as a piece of
writing, and the challenge in staging it, is letting the story flow cleanly,
but keeping the point of view clear to the audience. It’s 90 minutes long, and
has to move briskly.
OUR PRODUCTION
Wow! What a show to close out my tenure as a Chicago-based designer!
For so many reasons…. First it’s a quintessential CHICAGO story and writer…but
even moreso… it’s a show I’ve already designed! Thought he play had a previous
workshop production, I designed the original Chicago production of the show
back in 2007 for Chicago Dramatists.. the very venue where THIS production is
being mounted. Chicago Commercial Collective reassembled the original team
(everyone save the stage manager and the costume designer), including the two
actors who started it all.
The 2007 production was a run-away success. Breaking all
records for Chicago Dramatists (and its’ small 60 seat theatre), and garnering
TONS of good press. SO much so that commercial producers in New York heard
about it, and came to town to scout it out.
They were so enthralled with it that they then took the show, wholesale,
and moved it to a small commercial run at the Royal George (a presenting house here in Chicago) in a theatre space that doubled it’s occupancy. That run lasted
for nearly 6 months. There was talk of taking our production to New York, but
in the meantime, one of the New York producers leant the script to a big name
Hollywood star, who became enamored of it as a personal vehicle, that thus was
the end of the Chicago production moving to NYC. It was mounted in 2009 on
Broadway starring Hugh Jackman and Daniel Craig (that’s right… Wolverine and
the current James Bond), two non-Chicago, and in fact- non-American actors. It
broke all pre-sale box-office records on Broadway for a straight play, but the
play itself was critically dismissed as yet another cop procedural in the vein
of Law and Order. The reviews focused on the two actors more than the play, and
the visual sleight-of-hand that the Broadway production became. C’est la vie!
There are many around Chicago, who think that had our production moved, the
play itself would have received better notices. The other major outcome of all
of this was that the writer, Keith Huff, became a big-time writer/commodity,
spending a season or two writing for the TV show MAD MEN (I believe he even
won, or was nominated for an Emmy). The play, A STEADY RAIN has go on to more
than 30 productions world-wide, and is currently running in 7 different
countries. Keith is now living a much higher-profile career than the
mild-mannered gentlemen I met in 2007. Deservedly so. While I can’t say that
the play is my absolute favorite. I have to give him credit for creating
beautifully written characters who really FEEL like Chicago.
As to the set…. This production was desired to be pretty
much a recreation of our original, which I based on research from an actual
Chicago precinct interrogation room. It could be done simply on a blank stage
with a table and two chairs, but we put in a little more effort than that. On
the set there is a backwall with double-bolted windows covered in expanded
steel, and a door presumably off to the rest of the precinct house. The floor
is a real linoleum tile, in the basic colors of those in the interrogation room
I went to.. The table is at center and there are chairs for Denny and Joey and
hanging low overhead are two “warehouse” lights to help frame the vertical
space of the room. These are high enough o be out of the way, but low enough to
be intrusive into the space… packing the two men into the room in a way that (I
hope) makes them feel even more hemmed in.
It’s a simple design, but man, has it paid off in spades….
Not only did I get paid for the original production, but I got paid again for
the commercial remount(in 2008), and a weekly fee for each week that that
commercial run ran. As this production now is another COMMERCIAL run, I’m
drawing a base contract and a weekly fee for every week that it runs… it’s
supposed to close in early September, but the hope is to take the whole thing
out on tour… the longer it runs, the more money I make… I’m not going to argue
that point.
From my perspective, it’s a nice-looking set, and given that
the PLAY (and it’s success both with and without me) is a source of pride, I’m
rather happy that it’s my swansong here.
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