The Whale
Written bySamuel D. Hunter
CharactersCharlie, early to mid-forties
Liz, mid to late thirties
Mary, early to mid-forties
Ellie, seventeen
Elder Thomas, Male, nineteen
Date premiered2012
Place premieredDenver Center for the Performing Arts
Original languageEnglish
SubjectDrama
SettingNorth Idaho, present

The Whale is a play written by Samuel D. Hunter. The play, set in Moscow, Idaho,[1] tells the story of a 600-pound obese man who hides from the world and stays in his apartment. He cannot stop eating, to the detriment of everyone around him, including his estranged daughter.

Characters

  • Charlie – He is over 40 years old. According to Paul Hodgins of the Orange County Register, the play's author "wants us to get past our initial revulsion and see Charlie's size as a manifestation of his pain".[2]
  • Liz – She is a nurse. Hodgins called her Charlie's "enabler" because she feeds him junk food despite his enormous weight and her own pleading with him to get better medical care.[2]
  • Elder Thomas
  • Ellie – Charlie and Mary's daughter. Ellie has not seen or talked to her father in eight years, thanks to her mother's full custody, until she shows up one day at his apartment.
  • Mary – Charlie's ex-wife, and Ellie's mother. Ellie had received influences on her personality from Mary, according to Hodgins, and this is "glaringly obvious".[2]

Production history

Origins

Created through PlayPenn, a new play development program based in Philadelphia, the play was workshopped at the Icicle Creek Theatre Festival in Leavenworth, Washington. It was given the 2011 Sky Cooper New American Play Prize at Marin Theatre Company in Mill Valley, California and was produced there in 2014.[3]

Hunter stated that his reflections on teaching were the initial point of inspiration for The Whale, and that he did not add the obesity aspect until later, as a way of making the teacher have a "distance" from the audience and the other characters.[4]

According to Hunter, he made Elder Thomas a Mormon missionary as a way of "self-protection or distancing" so that he could "write about religion, but in a way that didn't feel too close to home".[5] Hunter stated that he used the Elder Thomas character as a "sort of unlikely connection to God".[4]

Staging

The play had its world premiere at the Denver Center for the Performing Arts performed by the resident theatre company as part of the Colorado New Play Summit. The cast included Tom Alan Robbins as Charlie and Angela Reed as Liz.[6]

Davis McCallum oversaw the first off-Broadway production in 2012 via Playwrights Horizons. Shuler Hensley and Rebecca Henderson starred as Charlie and Liz, respectively.[7]

In 2013, the play was produced at South Coast Repertory with Matthew Arkin as Charlie and Blake Lindsley as Liz.[8]

The play had its Chicago debut at the Victory Gardens Theater in 2013 with Dale Calandra as Charlie and Cheryl Graeff as Liz.[9]

The play had a Tokyo premiere in 2023. Sheepdog Theatre produced the run, with Walter Roberts as Charlie, Natsuki Robertson as Ellie, Laura Pollacco as Liz, Carlos Quiapo as Elder Thomas, and Louise Heal Kawai as Mary. It ran in English with Japanese subtitles. [10]

The Liz character did not have her ethnic background or race specified in the original play. As of 2022, many of the actresses portraying Liz were white. This differed from the film version, where the character, portrayed by Hong Chau, is of Asian heritage.[11]

In terms of plot progression, a play director named Davis McCallum stated that the goal is to "turn up the pressure until it almost can't be tolerated" and then have a "really cathartic release at the end of the piece".[12]

Film adaptation

Hunter wrote the screenplay for Darren Aronofsky's 2022 film adaptation of the same name. Aronofsky saw the play in 2012 and wanted to adapt it into a film, but he put the project on hold for years because he couldn't find the right actor to play Charlie.[13] The Whale stars Brendan Fraser as Charlie, Hong Chau as Liz, Sadie Sink as Ellie, and Ty Simpkins as Thomas. It received polarizing reviews by critics, but particular praise was directed toward the acting.[14][15] The film won two Academy Awards at the 2023 ceremony, for Actor in a Leading Role (Fraser) and Makeup and Hairstyling, and was nominated for Supporting Actress (Chau).[16][17]

References

  1. Wilkinson, Alissa (2022-09-20). "Inside Darren Aronofsky's messy movie The Whale is something wise about religious trauma". Vox Media. Retrieved 2023-06-16.
  2. 1 2 3 Hodgins, Paul (2013-03-17). "'The Whale' shows immensity of spirit". Orange County Register. Retrieved 2023-03-14.
  3. Marin Theatre The Whale
  4. 1 2 "A Conversation with Samuel D. Hunter". The Whale (PDF). South Coast Repertory. pp. P3–P4. Retrieved 2023-03-12.
  5. Wilkinson, Alissa (2022-12-09). "The Whale screenwriter on writing about religious fundamentalism, bodies, and hope". Vox. Retrieved 2023-03-13.
  6. The Whale production history
  7. 2012 PlaywrightsHorizons
  8. South Coast Rep 2013 playbill
  9. Victory Gardens The Whale
  10. 2023 Sheepdog Theatre
  11. Wong, Stevie (2022-12-13). "'The Whale' Star Hong Chau On Going From Wanting To Stay Home And Do Nothing To Making Four Films: "It Was A Really Nutty Year For Me"". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved 2023-03-13.
  12. Lee, Ashley (2022-12-23). "The 'cathartic release' of 'The Whale' explained by the play's actors and directors". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2023-03-14.
  13. "Darren Aronofsky on The Whale, casting Brendan Fraser and fat suit criticism". CBC Radio. 2022-12-16. Retrieved 2023-05-21.
  14. Ide, Wendy (2023-02-05). "The Whale review – Brendan Fraser is remarkable in knotty drama of self-destruction". The Observer. ISSN 0029-7712. Retrieved 2023-03-26.
  15. Scott, A. O. (2022-12-07). "'The Whale' Review: Body Issues". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-03-26.
  16. Hipes, Patrick (January 24, 2023). "Oscar Nominations: The Complete List of Nominees". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved January 24, 2023.
  17. Pulver, Andrew (2023-03-13). "Brendan Fraser wins best actor Oscar for The Whale". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2023-03-26.
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