Toni Stone is probably the most famous athlete you never heard of. From 1949 to 1954, she played baseball in the Negro Leagues and was the first woman of any race to play professionally in the sport. She was hired for the San Francisco Sea Lions as a publicity stunt and had her longest stint with the Indianapolis Clowns, the diamond equivalent of the Harlem Globetrotters who incorporated comedic antics into their very serious field work. Based on Martha Ackman’s biography, “Curveball: The Remarkable Story of Toni Stone,” Lydia R. Diamond’s play Toni Stone, now at Roundabout Theatre Company’s Laura Pels space, relays this unjustly obscure story in boldly theatrical terms, inventively staged by Pam MacKinnon.
Diamond documents Toni’s unique story of combatting racism as well as sexism with crackling wit and insight. In tangy and vernacular language, Toni explains to the audience how holding a baseball feels right and compares her emotions about the game to those of a girlhood friend for boys. (“It was like a part of her was missing if she didn’t have the boys,” she explains. “It was like with me and baseball.”) In addition, Diamond tellingly develops the story of Toni’s unconventional love life. She remains romantically unattached, leading some of her teammates to speculate on her sexuality, until she meets an older Jamaican businessman named Alberga. Her astonished discovery of courtship and later marriage form the parallel track of this life voyage. The tracks blend when Alberga forces his new wife to quit the game she loves, and Toni must face male oppression in her own home. The narrative jumps back and forth in time, creating some confusion, but MacKinnon’s imaginative, dynamic direction, Camille A. Brown’s intense movement, and a rock-solid cast compensate for any dramaturgic lapses.
The charismatic April Matthis wins the MVP award in a quirky, vibrant performance in the title role, perfectly balancing Toni’s child-like innocence with her steely determination. She’s incredibly funny to boot, delivering Toni’s dead-pan wisecracks with the expert timing of a veteran stand-up comic. Matthis is surrounded by a versatile cast of eight men—making for a seamless team of nine just like in baseball. They play all the other figures, male and female of both races, in Toni’s life, reinforcing the theme of fluid identity and the arbitrariness of gender and racial roles.
Kenn E. Head is convincingly feminine, yet also tough and worldly-wise as Millie, a seen-it-all prostitute and Toni’s chief advisor in the affairs of the heart. Harvy Blanks makes for an endearing Alberga, and Ezra Knight menaces with real threat as a harassing teammate. Riccardo Hernandez’s dugout set transforms into all the settings in her journey from tomboyish girlhood to uncompromising pioneer in a man’s world.
With all the athletic activity on display, it’s ironic that the most moving moments are still and silent. After a vigorous demonstrating of “cooning,” dancing in exaggerated, stereotypical fashion as the Clowns did during their games, the cast stops and mutely stares at the audience for an uncomfortably long time before exiting slowly and the house lights come up to mark the end of the first act. It’s a shockingly intense confrontation as the “clowns” drop their cliched racist masks of merriment to reveal their real selves and Toni Stone transcends its flaws to become a raw statement of anger like the recent Fairview.
Images:
Opened:
June 20, 2019
Ended:
August 11, 2019
Country:
USA
State:
New York
City:
New York
Company/Producers:
Roundabout Theater Company
Theater Type:
off-Broadway
Theater:
Steinberg Center - Laura Pels Theater
Theater Address:
111 West 46 Street
Running Time:
2 hrs, 15 min
Genre:
Drama
Director:
Pam MacKinnon
Choreographer:
Camille A. Brown
Review:
Cast:
Ezra Knight, April Matthis
Technical:
Set: Riccardo Hernandez
Miscellaneous:
This review was first published in Theaterlife.com and CulturalDaily.com, 6/19.
Critic:
David Sheward
Date Reviewed:
June 2019