Both history and literature are peppered with intense stories of sibling rivalry. The most contentious of the lot often recount the environmental and circumstantial forces that pit them against one another, sometimes resulting in wrenching, tragic results. Added to this cannon almost a decade ago was Suzan-Lori Parks' searing two-person drama TOPDOG/UNDERDOG, currently enjoying a well-executed revival production at South Coast Repertory in Costa Mesa through January 29.
Brimming with foreboding tension and biting humor, the Pulitzer Prize-winning play (and a 2002 Tony Award nominee for Best Play) tells the haunting story of two African-American brothers—Lincoln (Curtis McClarin) and his younger brother Booth (Larry Bates)—who attempt to navigate their seemingly stunted adulthood while being on a constant battle with the pressures of severe poverty and family history. But as their diametrically opposing names foretell (it is perhaps not a coincidence that their father, as a joke, named his children after The Great Emancipator and the man who later assassinated him), the two also clash with each other in a never-ending game of one-upsmanship.Videos