Palace of the End
Written by Judith Thompson
Directed by Daniella Topol
Peter Jay Sharp Theater
416 West 42nd Street
Review by Aaron Riccio
Lynndie England: accidental torturer. David Kelley:
heartsick weapons inspector. Nehrjas Al Saffarh: trusting member of the Iraqi
Communist Party. With the allegory of Alice’s looking glass, Judith Thompson
not only connects these desperate and disparate characters, but also turns a
sharp mirror on society by revisiting the infamous abuses at Abu Ghraib prison.
Built by invisible, arbitrary borders (like Iraq itself), Palace of the End isolates all three of these characters on stage
and then, monologue by monologue, uses their fractured realizations of the
world to tie them together. Thompson takes liberties with her mix of research
and storytelling skills when explaining Lynndie’s infamous “thumbs-up”
pictures, Kelley’s suicide, and Saffarh’s struggle to resist Saddam. But these
“invented” characters hold fast: Her writing is seamless and every bit as
breathtaking for the audience as it is for the actors who labor for breath,
fogging up that looking glass.
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Torture Chamber: Teri Lamm channels infamous Army reservist Lynndie England in Judith Thompson’s Palace of the End.
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The monologue “My Pyramids” quickly dispenses with the
stereotypes of Lynndie by making her funny: She’s more offended by being called
ugly than she is by posts that threaten to kill her. It just as quickly
humanizes her: She was out of her depth at Dairy Queen; what did they expect
from putting her in charge of “terrorists”? Teri Lamm deserves a Purple Heart
for all the emotional blood behind her portrayal of this likeable, delusional
martyr. Rocco Sisto deserves one, too: As Kelley lay dying, he struggles to
find the strength within his soft-spoken self to call out “the truth” behind
the senseless killings his report helped to “justify” in Iraq. As for Heather
Raffo — bathed in a golden light, she reflects both happier and darker times.
Her account of Saddam’s torturers is almost as heartbreaking as the thought of
all that wasted perseverance. These are strong, charismatic performances,
layered with the compressed depth and insight of three wholly different plays.
Palace of the End works best, however, as one show, and this is where Daniella Topol shines. The
best sort of director, she enhances Thompson’s work not by reinterpreting it,
but by focusing on the mournful humanity behind simple actions: rubber stamping
a document, shaking dirt off one’s pants, sipping a cup of tea. In this light,
the abstractions both of the monologue form and Mimi Lien’s jaggedly pointed
mirrors, become inescapably real.