PICK TWELVE ANGRY MEN Reginald Rose’s 1957 courtroom drama is as familiar as a beef dip
that’s been on the deli menu for decades. And Scott Ellis’ touring show
for Roundabout Theatre Company has been crossing the country for so
many months, this ensemble plays it as tautly as a ballet. Richard
Thomas plays doubting Thomas as an Ivy League skeptic among Brooklyn
sports fans and a European watchmaker. Thomas shows twitches of both
reflectiveness and sarcasm as he casts a long shadow over the “guilty”
opinion held by the 11 other fellas in a sweaty jury room about to step
back into court and render their verdict. The case is that of a ghetto
kid accused of murdering his father, with a couple of witnesses
supporting the charge. Dissecting the logic of the witnesses’
testimony, both the play and this production are glorious in their
meticulousness, in the way when one new “not guilty” vote emerges from
the discussion, it’s met with an explosion of fury, like dogs barking
when a rabbit is dropped outside their fence. The music then shifts
into adagio as reason returns. Allen Moyer’s grimy set provides the
single locale for a visual dynamic that’s as hypnotic as the ebbs and
floes of a lava lamp. Lovely performances also by George Wendt’s
rotund, slightly baffled foreman, and by Alan Mandell as a principled
old codger who, at any minute, is either going to launch into a tap
dance, pass out or pass away. In the end, though, the play steals the
thunder in its magnificent clash between evidence and prejudice, between
truth and assumption, that what we take to be the orderly and empirical
is, in fact, largely grounded in fiction, distortion and subliminal
rage. And that’s nothing new. Roundabout
Theatre Company and Center Theatre Group at the Ahmanson Theatre, 135
N. Grand Ave., dwntwn.; Tues.-Sat., 8 p.m.; Sun., 7:30 p.m.; Sat.-Sun.,
2 p.m.; thru... More >>>