A picaresque evocation of the on-the-edge avant-garde theatrical world of the 1960's follows seven-year-old Rikki as he is adopted by an eccentric gypsy-like acting troupe led by an artistic genius and her ex-drag queen brother. 15,000 first printing.
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Swados (The Four of Us, 1991) seems to have intended some sort of deep subtext in this puzzling novel, but it is too carefully buried. Rikki Nelson (yes, named after the other one) is nine years old. Her prostitute mother (who sometimes ``lent'' her to customers) has disappeared, and Rikki is living with a man who might be her biological father and who has theatrical aspirations: ``He said he wanted to direct long plays by a man named Eugene O'Neill.'' Although Rikki doesn't speak, he manages to find her advertising work as a model. Then her big break arrives, and she is taken in by Sasha Volotny, a famed experimental director. He begins, with his troupe, to develop a show called ``The Myth Man,'' which one participant describes as ``a metaphysical follies...Ed Sullivan for snobs.'' Rikki is entrusted to the care of Sasha's brother, Charles, a former drag queen. There are other quirky hangers-on, including a Yale Drama School graduate writing an article on the group for The Village Voice. Sasha (n‚ Stephen Solomon) is supposed to be a charismatic leader, but he just seems like a pretentious taskmaster. His own brother taunts him by telling him that he sounds like ``a Swami from Long Island.'' Sasha's prattle about mythology and creativity is a guaranteed snooze. When Charles--dressed as Icarus--accidentally lights on fire during a rehearsal, Rikki speaks--and thereafter babbles in strange, disjointed phrases. The group travels on to Paris, and finally Sasha receives a grant to take the company into the Amazon and towards its inevitable crisis and destruction. Swados, a playwright and composer, pokes fun at wealthy arts patrons and makes the adult actors look foolish through Rikki's childlike eyes and clear literary voice. But is she just trying to say that all theater is silly? This has the feel of a parable, but the moral remains a mystery. A traveling show that goes nowhere. (Author tour) -- Copyright ©1994, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
An award-winning composer and director as well as author of the cathartic family memoir The Four of Us (1991), Swados has written an enrapturing and provocative tale of artistic fervor, blind ambition, epic selfishness, and survival. The time is the late 1960s, and beautiful little Rikki Nelson, the abused and mute daughter of a whore, has, in effect, been sold to the acclaimed avant-garde director Sasha Volotny. The personification of the consequence of placing art above all else, Sasha demands extreme forms of self-sacrifice from his disciples, even Rikki, and is locked in a profound love-hate battle with his far more compassionate brother, Charles. Formerly a celebrated drag queen (and a delightful character), Charles becomes, as he describes it, Rikki's mother of invention, and the only person she can trust. As Rikki matures and regains her ability to speak, Sasha's inspired yet maniacal quest for the origin of myths and the true meaning of theater places his followers in increasingly riskier situations. As the troupe journeys from New York to Paris to the malevolent Amazonian jungle, Swados examines the fine line between leadership and exploitation, art and audacity, love and manipulation. Swados' original, dramatic, humorous, and mind-expanding novel is as direct and involving as dance, and as haunting as music. Donna Seaman
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