divine lite
by Douglas Messerli
David Javerbaum An Act of God / Los
Angeles, the Ahmanson Theatre. The performance I saw was on February 10, 2016
I don’t know what has happened to my sense of
humor. At Sean Hayes’ pleasant but also somewhat aggravating performance last
night of David Javerbaum’s An
Perhaps it’s simply that I don’t watch enough television, particularly
television comedies, and, accordingly, the stream of lame one-liners that this
confection proffered up, just wasn’t—to use what today has almost become a
political metaphor—my cup of tea. I mean, come on, shouldn’t I be able to
chortle over a god who admits that he has nothing against gays, lesbians,
transsexuals, or any other sexuality?; who reveals the fact that the first
couple upon earth were actually Adam and Steve, not Adam and Eve? It was all
that phallic snake’s fault, who, after feeding them that apple, made them feel
as if they’d sinned, that cast them out their gay paradise.
And
who mightn’t like a god who’s fed up with everybody taking his name in “vain,’
thanking him for anything and everything they have achieved on their own: “Kanye, next time you win the Grammy
Award and you thank me for your ‘God-given talents,’ they’re going to get
God-taken, understand?” And this god seems spot-on in his observation that
there’s something perverse about a child, laying down to sleep, praying “if I
should die before I wake.”
So what’s my problem? Why couldn’t I
laugh along with all the others? It’s not easy to explain, but I guess even in
my disbelief I take true belief more seriously than the well-dressed heathens
who made up this audience. I mean, even as this user-friendly god points out,
terrible things have been allowed to happen in the name of the Christian god,
so terrible that’s it’s not so simple to just forgive and forget as he might
command. And every day others who can’t or won’t give him up go on cooking up more
terrible things to do for those of us who can’t or won’t believe in Him. And
after all, this is just one “god.” What about all the others?
So
frankly, it’s hard for me to believe in a PC god, who just wants to be loved,
even for one night. Why is it funny to dish what so many deeply believe in,
when the belief itself can continue to be so destructive to all?
Oh
come-on I can hear you saying, “lighten up!” Even this god seems a little
amused by the constant suffering of his son—not his only child evidently. But
then, that has always been the big problem for me: I was never touched by the
divine lite.
Los Angeles, February 11, 2016
Reprinted from USTheater, Opera, and Performance (February 2016)
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