Skylight Theatre Company
Recently in my review of A Doll’s House, Part 2 at Pasadena Playhouse, I mentioned if asked to name the best of the exciting new generation of playwrights whose work I felt will stand the test of time, Lucas Hnath would definitely be among them. Also high on the list for me would be Roger Q. Mason, a rule-defying and fearless wordsmith I believe is one of the best and boldest theatre artists of our time.
It seems especially clear that Mason could easily be identified as a direct descendant of the innovative and death-defying spirit of Tennessee Williams in his later days—you know, that time when Tenn explored deeply impudent topics and adopted a lyrical style that backfired for him and caused everybody to insist the last century’s best dramatist had lost his touch. I steadfastly then and still believe he was simply way ahead of his time.
I don’t often begin a review by mentioning the work of the director. In this case, however, Jessica Hanna deserves an early shout out. The main influence that turned the critics and the public against Williams was a major career-defining moment in his work which happened just prior to the creation of The Night of the Iguana. It was at that point in his celebrated career that he began his lifelong feud with his great mentor and collaborator, master director Eli Kazan. Without Kazan at his side to help corral so many diverse flashes of thought and the genius of Williams into a cohesive narrative, his plays were all over the place.
Fascinating as their journey may be, I suspect from what I’ve seen that Roger Q. Mason can occasionally get lost in their themes and strikingly contemporary poetry. Like a modernday Kazan, in helming Mason’s Hide & Hide, now in its world premiere at the Skylight, Hanna has proven herself to be the perfect accomplice to help them frame their thoughts and ideas and make it all more accessible. Together, Mason and Hanna are posterchildren for what this kind of electric artistic collaboration can bring to fruition.
Hide & Hide could go sparking off into so many different directions but between Hanna’s inventive staging and the incredibly creative lighting design by Brandon Baruch, Mason’s continuous flashes of genius are both glorified and yet contained in a way that’s as important to the storytelling as the writing itself.
Set in the darkest shadows of Los Angeles’ often harsh Land of Unequal Opportunity in the 1980s, Constanza (Amielynn Abellera) and Billy (Ben Larson) are both newly arrived outsiders to our world of potential plenty, she a bright and educated Filipina here illegally and wary of deportation, he a teenage runaway escaping from a Texas gay conversion camp surviving on the mean streets as a rentboy.
The two meet at the infamous now-defunct Studio One nightclub in West Hollywood and form an unlikely bond, forged from their mutual need to find their individual though highly diverse identities, their universal struggle to be free, and their pursuit of the illusive American Dream—something in 2025 which now sadly seems more an ancient myth than anything attainable except in the rarest of cases.
Their possible quick fix is a shaky one as they enter into a sham marriage that will give Constanza her citizenship and offer Billy some desperately needed stability. It’s a solution that's clearly doomed when viewed by an audience hardened to the facts of life some 45 years in the future and compounded by the dastardly dealings of a destructive ego-maniac intent on destroying our country and banishing the term “Land of the Free” for all time to come.
Abellera is stunning not only as our rapidly crumpling heroine slowly losing all sense of self-worth, but in a series of side characters, including her greedy aunt advising her how to make her fortune as she did by giving up her ideals and as Ricky, a sleazy lawyer and human trafficer who drains everything he can get from Constanza, including her self-respect, and takes advantage of Billy’s youth and any scrap of dignity he has left.
Larson, a recent graduate of USC’s School of Dramatic Arts, makes an auspicious professional LA stage debut as the sweet and compromised kid from the boonies who can turn in a heartbeat into a potentially savage caged animal ready and willing to strike. With a little more seasoning, opportunity, and encouragement, Larson will certainly grow into an actor I for one will be excited to watch evolve.
Hanna’s sharply choreographed staging makes the actors’ lightning-speed transitions between characters and the places they inhabit cleverly accessible, again complimented by Baruch’s arresting lighting plot, set designer Christopher Scott Murillo’s stark vision of an eerily dystopic Los Angeles, and Amelia Anello’s excellent and often discordant sound.
Mason’s writing is gritty, bold, and often downright hilarious, never losing sight of the message that anyone outside of society’s norm in our culture has a continuous uphill battle to keep their head above the ever-encroaching waves. While the overworked concept of the American Dream originally promised an ethos that every person in our poor maligned country had the right to personal freedom and the opportunity to attain a better life, Hide & Hide reminds us that such a once-perfect ideal has twisted and devolved into an ugly grab for wealth, power, and social mobility, leaving far too many worthy individuals ready to give up and take a midnight walk into those very waves that taunt us all relentlessly.
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I would also like to share an essay here sparked by Hide & Hide written by H. A. Eaglehart, my life partner and prolific wordsmith in his own right. Interesting that Hugh also immediately saw the connection between Roger and Tennessee Williams, and so completely and passionately observed the importance of a voice so near—and yet so far—from his own. This isn’t meant as another review of the play, yet there are significant crossovers here I thought readers would find interesting. It’s wondrous how similarly—and differently—art can impact each of us:
Every year traveling across Navajo Nation in tour coach buses packed full of 12-year-olds eager to raft the Colorado River, the ninos always ask me why I left my homeland. “Where you live matters,” is always my answer. If I wasn't living in Los Angeles, it wouldn't be possible to take 12-year-old Angelenos to the last place in America still free, almost the last place still clinging to pride. Pride and freedom walk hand in hand with Navajo.
Playwright Roger Q. Mason wrote a play Hide and Hide, which just opened at the Skylight Theatre in Hollywood. I highly recommend seeing this production. The story takes place in Los Angeles and in my personal opinion it's influenced by the work of Tennessee Williams in many ways. My only qualm with the play is I'm tired of theatre and film portraying Los Angeles as a dangerous place for youth.
Everywhere is dangerous for humans, period, and in many places like Boulder Colorado, Palestine, or Ukraine it's a lot more dangerous for children. I'm tired of Los Angeles being portrayed as this place lacking in values and creating a horrific void hungrily devouring innocent people left and right. Give me a break. Some of the most wholesome down-to-earth folks I know live in Los Angeles and almost all of the awful people I know wear red ball caps and live in Middle America.
Hide & Hide has a Midwest character traumatized from an exploratory experience at a summer camp while growing up. Seeking an identity leads him to LA where he is further taken advantage of. Roger, the playwright, gives this character a jaw-dropping monologue at the end of the play which brilliantly reflects Tennessee's line in The Night of the Iguana as Shannon attempts to “take the long swim to China.”
I would love an honest play based in the reality depicting the real Los Angeles as a place where kids are allowed to be kids and explore the epitome of self-discovery without being subjected to the self-hatred destroying the rest of this country and planet. If the character in Roger’s play had gone to Griffith Park Boys Camp back in that summer of his youth, there would have been no stigma to create the trauma embodied within him.
The first chapter of my autobiography, Urban Native: the Musings of a Queer Navajo Cowboy in Hollywood, states I'm sick of Los Angeles being stigmatized as the Throne of Satan, while America's Heartland gets portrayed as Andy Griffith's Mayberry despite its residents busily doing the devil’s work by reelecting Trump to once again legalize gay conversion therapy summer camps. I want a play where Los Angeles is portrayed in the role normally given to small town America steeped in common sense and good old values, while the evil role full of debauchery always pinned on LA instead gets handed to small town America. I mean, Griffith Park Boys Camp actually has “Griffith” in the name, for crying out loud! Where do you think they filmed The Andy Griffith Show? North Carolina?
It's not bragging to talk about the amount of success we are having in experiential education right now. We're designing after school programs, creating outdoor adventure departments, impacting thousands of kids every month, and building new challenge courses in SoCal at historic rates. We are almost to the point where kids in Los Angeles have more access to outdoor adventure programming than kids who live in rural states. This is why I currently do not live on the Navajo Nation, because I can champion my people's values more loudly in Hollywood.
Normally I'm not into Pride parades—and you could say this is hilarious considering where we live. This year is different, however, as so much hate is brewing across the world against LGBTQ rights. The LA Pride Parade is the oldest Pride event in the world and Travis and I live inside the rectangle of the parade route. I couldn't be more proud of my mailing address than I am right now, because there's nothing more hated by Trump's voting goons than a big giant Pride Parade broadcast around the world.
There are photographs of newlywed Navajo gay couples predating the Civil War, meaning Shiprock, New Mexico has got Los Angeles and New York beat by centuries when it comes to LGBTQ rights. And I was born in one place and have lived in the other two. How gay is that? My mom remembers when she was in high school and the Shiprock HS basketball ball team, the Chieftains, would champion the LGBTQ community during home games. Whenever off-reservation white high school teams came to play against the Chieftains in Shiprock (where I was born), all the Navajo would attend holding hands with someone of the same sex. Even heterosexual Navajo would attend holding hands with other heterosexuals. The Evangelical parents of the white team players were always horrified, which made the Navajo community very happy.
Fun fact: the first challenge course I ever worked on is at the Shiprock High School in New Mexico and the first summer camp where I became the challenge course manager is in Hollywood, CA. This is why I say it matters where you live.