Okay,
just so there’s no confusion about the currently running theatrical Mammas (with
exclamation points!): Mamma Mia! is
the musical now at the Great Lakes Theater while Ya Mama! is the one-person show that just opened at Cleveland
Public Theatre. They’re both about mammas, however you spell them, but that’s
about where the similarities end.
Well,
there actually is one shared aspect since both of these shows have been seen in
Cleveland before. The ABBA jukebox musical has been popping up on various tours
for a good long time while Ya Mama!,
written and performed by Nina Domingue, had a previous CPT production in 2012.
The
return of Domingue is always a welcome sight since she ignites the stage with
her spot-on characterizations and stage movement that is gloriously expressive.
Once again, she is telling her own story of growing up in the fires of her own
personal hell: her mother committed suicide by drinking drain cleaner when Nina
was just four years old. Eventually, her father married a woman named Betty who
turned out to be psychologically and physically abusive to the growing Nina.
Using
quicksilver persona shifts, Domingue seamlessly fashions scenes involving three
or more characters, and it’s a tribute to her talent that we never get those
characters confused. These are the moments that work best and resonate most
effectively. When Betty snaps at Nina, ordering her to rewash the laundry if
there’s speck of lint on anything, your heart sinks along with the young
girl’s.
As
Nina grows into adulthood she begins having her own kids, hacking her way
through the jungle of motherhood issues (What do you do when a child is sick?)
without having the guiding light that she was denied from her own mothering
wasteland. Her challenges from the five-day labor she experienced with her
first child are both agonizing and hilarious.
In
this stage iteration, Domingue is joined by Bill Ransom, sitting high above and
behind the performer, contributing deft touches of percussion—a rattle of wood
blocks here and a sprightly bongo riff there. His efforts add a lovely texture
to the proceedings that amplify the emotions at key times.
Under
the sensitive direction of Nathan Henry. Domingue tells about her life in 75
minutes of riveting storytelling. She does her remarkable work in a scenic
design by Inda Blatch-Geib that is sometimes startlingly powerful (getting
trapped in a large bookcase with collapsed shelves) and at other times just
startling for no particular reason (a door with a broken shard of another door
sticking out from it).
As
was the case six years ago, Domingue’s writing can tend towards the didactic
when she wants to clearly make a point about her life. This is completely
understandable on an emotional level, but theatrically it pulls the audience
out of the moment, particularly at the end when the character Nina takes an
emotional victory lap.
One
wishes Domingue the playwright would fully trust her word artistry by just
telling the story, avoid summarizing, and allowing the audience to draw its own
conclusions. But if you long to see an actor in full control of her impressive
capabilities, ya gotta see Ya Mama!
Ya
Mama!
Through
October 27 at Cleveland Public Theatre, 6415 Detroit Ave., 216-631-2727,
cptonline.org.
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