It’s
weird how sometimes a concept we all agree upon can be upended, suddenly
rendering that concept almost meaningless. This is especially troubling for a
playwright who labors on a script for months, or years, and then opens the show
in a world where all the assumptions of the play have been rendered null and
void.
Take
Margin of Error, now enjoying its
regional premiere at Ensemble Theatre. The talented local playwright Eric Coble
constructed this 90-minute show based on a lot of political common knowledge at
the time. But it is opening here at a time when the current presidential race
has been thrown for a loop by a candidate, Donald Trump, who has defied every
single truism about what a person had to do to run for that high office.
As
a result, the play feels substantially dated through absolutely no fault of its
own. Who could have predicted that a presidential candidate could run for
office while insulting large swaths of the population in the most vulgar terms,
lie constantly, brag about wanting to use nuclear weapons, support unregulated
gun sales, and even refer to the size of his penis as a reason for voting for
him?
That
said, Coble has written a tight and fiercely funny play about the way politics
used to work, back when you had to be careful of every utterance should a single minor lip-slip lead to bad headlines the next day. Harold Carver, a bloodthirsty
Republican operative known for his viciousness, is trapped in a fog bank at
Cleveland Hopkins Airport, along with his aide Daphne. And he’s working a
collection of color-coded cell phones, each one dedicated to a different GOP
candidate (and one secret Democrat) across the country.
Deliciously
played by Michael Mauldin, Carver has a way with words, using the term “Boots
on neck!” to indicate to his minions the ruthlessness with which they should do
their jobs. He’s out to engineer a “great Republican domination” of the
political landscape, from the lowest offices to the highest, finding a way to
elect often idiotic candidates as long as they have an (R) after their
names.
Based
on some phone calls with his wife, Carver has problems at home which he’s
juggling with his pep talks to wavering pols while managing his relationship with
Daphne. In turn, she tries to prove her worth by strategizing along with him as
he erupts with a volley of mini-lessons including the ultimate acronym warning:
DFIU (Don’t Fuck It Up!).
Mauldin
is a compressed whirlwind of repressed anger and resentment as the nicely-named Carver shreds his enemies in the airport’s waiting area (although a player like him would probably
have a membership in all the airline lounges). Mauldin brilliantly performs Coble’s
in-the-know words, showing how talking points get developed and how cardboard
candidates can be made to look three-dimensional—even if stories have to be
conjured up out of thin air. You can’t take your eyes off Mauldin, and he
rewards you with a memorable character.
As
Daphne, Mary-Francis Renee Miller holds her own and serves as a strong foil to
Hurricane Carver, even though she has less to work with. Her desire to please
her boss is clear, as she sees through his bluster to vulnerabilities that lie
beneath.
Sure,
Coble’s ending is a bit predictable, but he keeps the energy of Carver’s manic
personality front and center. And it ain’t his fault that anyone who follows
politics and is watching the show will be throwing asterisks all over the place—noting
how things have changed in politics thanks to the bilious, misogynistic, racist
blowhard who now leads the Republican Party.
Margin
of Error
Through
October 23 at Ensemble Theatre, 2843 Washington Blvd., Cleveland Heights,
216-321-2930.
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