REVIEWS FOR ACTOR UNDER FIRE

Actor Under Fire

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Written by Robert Machray
Published December 07, 2008
Part of StageMagePart of StageMage

The wonderful actor James Gleason has written a one-person play about his experiences during Vietnam. It took him 38 years, but the result is an engaging study of what happens when art and war interconnect.
Gleason traces his early life when he was trying to decide what to do about being drafted. He had toyed with being an actor, and then a priest. His mom liked the idea of having a priest in the family, but his father’s attitude was more like “you have got to be kidding” only stated with more disdain. So Gleason decided to visit his local recruiter, who promised him he could do a touring show as an actor, so he signed up for the Air Force. He was sent to Vietnam as an MP but grabbed a chance to tour in Star Spangled Girl by Neil Simon.
Gleason’s adventures doing Star Spangled Girl are hilarious. Actor Under Fire is peppered with colorful characters and wild situations. Imagine performing for a group of soldiers who only want to see striptease, or performing in a monsoon. Along the way, he learned something about acting, himself, and war. Gleason tours all over Vietnam but finally finds himself in a graveyard where he discovers that some of the characters he has met along the way are victims of that pointless war. The play has been well directed by Anita Khanzadian who uses slides and three black cubes to set the stage.
There are many very funny and also touching moments in the piece. One of my favorites is Gleason’s homecoming to his father, a World War II vet who loved to tell stories about landing on Omaha Beach and fighting for the duration of the war. When Gleason confronts him on his return from Vietnam he doesn’t talk about his acting adventure but rather tells of his chance meetings with people along the way, and their subsequent deaths.
Gleason dedicates the play to “the men and women on the wall.” The experience makes a man of him, and he earns his father’s respect. It also makes him an actor. He ends the play with a salute. I salute him for sharing this tale.