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Heller Theatre opened its second play of the season, Rocket Man by Steven Dietz, last Thursday evening. I was excited to see it after last season's excellent showing of Inventing Van Gogh by the same playwright, for which director (and artistic director for both Heller and Clark Theatres) assembled a stellar cast. Tattershall, in her direction of Rocket Man, once again gathered together a few of Tulsa's finest actors for a performance that did not disappoint. Rocket Man opens with Donny (Starr Hardgrove) entering his attic, a place that used to house his dreams of becoming a landscape designer but is now cluttered with boxes, remnants of his life and an old traffic light. He plops a box onto a card table and relates what, we can assume, has made up most of his life for at least the past few months. Donny is a man who has spent more than his fair share of hours standing at a traffic light, relentlessly pushing that little button that is supposed to make the light change and free him to safely cross the street. One day, exasperated by what he sees as the futility of repeatedly pressing a button and waiting for the light to change, he pries the little box off the light post and opens it up. Nothing. Just a "lone button attached to the finger of a stupid pedestrian." |
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