the confession
by
Douglas Messerli
Bruce
Jay Friedman (teleplay, based on his stage play), Burt Brinckerhoff
(director) Steambath / 1973 [PBS TV broadcast]
With the recent death of novelist and playwright Bruce Jay Friedman, I determined to watch his 1971 play Steambath. The version I saw was the 1973 PBS production, broadcast in the day on only 41 outlets. Since then, the play has been revived numerous times.
If the play was originally filled with obscenities, uttered mostly by God, in this case a Puerto Rican who cleans and cares for a steambath; in the television version many of these works were excised, the play tamed down a bit—although still showing a woman, Meredith calmly strolling into this men’s den to take a shower, and the two gay men of this work who do a kind of strip-tease to “Let Me Entertain You.”
In
this production Bill Bixby plays the central figure Tandy, and Valerie Perrine
the bubbleheaded Meredith—whose major activities include shopping at
Bloomingdale’s, getting a new hairdo, and paying her Bloomingdale’s bill.
Tandy,
on the other hand, has just begun what he describes as a new life. Having
divorced his sexually promiscuous wife, he has found a new very calm—perhaps
too calm—partner, has begun a book on Charlemagne, and finally connected with
his daughter on a trip with her to Las Vegas.
At
first, however, Tandy and Meredith do not perceive that they are dead, until
speaking with one another they realize that they had simply been going about
their daily lives, Tandy eating at a Chinese restaurant and Meredith, as
always, shopping when they both suddenly themselves in the steambath, and in
recounting that realize, as strange as it seems, they must be dead. Friedman
has recounted the fact he had a “bad experience with food at a Chinese
restaurant” that had led him to contemplate mortality.
Tandy
and Meredith both refuse their deaths, Tandy demanding to see the person in
charge. The old codger says there is someone who, from time to time, enters the
steam room to gather up the towels and wash down the surfaces.
When
he finally does show up, he is a foul-mouth Puerto Rican who, with the help of
a machine, orders terrible deaths and a few good deeds in succession. When the
Puerto Rican (José Perez) describes himself as God, Tandy refuses to believe
it, locked in his bigotries and incapability of imagining God as a kind of
janitor (“I find it relaxing,” he insists, given all his other duties).But
Tandy will not believe. You cannot be God, he insists.
To
prove his godhead, the Puerto Rican does stage-bound card tricks, and pulls a
large group of colored scarves from his pants, Tandy taunting him for his mere
magician’s tricks.
Yet
even this non-believer is somewhat overcome with awe, and has to admit the
possibility that the Puerto Rican is something more than his surface
projection.
Soon
after, another man joins their group, projecting the daily stock market results
upon the wall. As he laments, he has bet only on sure and safe stock instead of
chancy ones. Yet his have all gone down, while the chancy ones have continued
rise. He too must have been a suicide.
God
finally orders all of them to enter the door which will take them to the
void—which they one by one enter. All except Tandy who tries again to argue his way out of death,
explaining his divorce, his new writing and companion, and closer relationship
with his daughter.
A new group is about to enter.
Yet strangely, without God saying anything, he seems to
hear an invisible dialogue, slowly realizing that his new girlfriend is
absolutely boring, that the book he is writing is a trivial work on something
he knows little about (although God has previously told him that 20th Fox,
having bought what he has written from his estate, will make a film of the
fragment), and that is daughter might be better off in a room of young girl’s
like herself than in the hands of her estranged father. The whirlwind he has
experienced is merely empty air.
Yet,
even God listens to this man’s heartfelt confession, and suggests he may keep
him on for a while as his assistant.
The
play ends, however, with a spotlight on Tandy, as he sits alone suffering the
repercussions of what he has come to realize.
Friedman’s
play is fiercely funny, yet fairly dramatically serious in its
meta-physical implications. In the original Tony Perkins played Tandy. And
I’d like to see someone of that stature perform it on film, if there were ever
to be another production.
Los
Angeles, June 14, 2020
Reprinted
from USTheater, Opera and Performance (June 2020).



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