Lyndon Johnson was a huge asshole. He invaded everyoneโs personal spaceโif he wanted something from you, he would put his hand inside your suit
jacket and roam around in there while his face would hover a lickโs distance from your cheek and his other hand would rub your shoulders or tug on
your earlobe or squeeze other body parts. The discomfort was like a drug to him. The petty power games he played with everyone in his orbit ranged from the
subtle (heโd never give a compliment without following it with a little personal barb) to the loud and clear (he would demand that reporters and
legislators stand in the bathroom and talk to him while he was taking a shit). He bought an amphibious car seemingly just for the sake of a repeated prank:
When an unwitting rube was sitting in the passenger seat, Johnson would pretend to lose control of the car and drive straight into a body of water, just to
watch the fear on his passengerโs face and then laugh at their confusion when the car gracefully floated along the water.
Of course, assholes get stuff done. Johnson ruled the Senate with an iron fist, and then, when he became president, he capitalized on the national grief
following President Kennedyโs assassination to launch the Civil Rights Act of 1964, one of the most significant pieces of legislation in the latter
half of the 20th century, into law. In so doing, he reshaped America.
All the Way is about the passage of that act and its repercussions, and Robert Schenkkanโs script is undeniably a modern masterpiece. It helps that Johnson, with
his outsize personality, is probably the modern president who lends himself most ably to Shakespearean-style tragedy, but Schenkkan also transforms the
political convolutions of the time into something even poli-sci neophytes can understand. He condenses these figures to their Jungian archetypes. Strom
Thurmondโs defection from Dixiecrat to full-blown Republican, for example, is presented as the betrayal of a minor general on the evening of an
empire-endangering battle. J. Edgar Hoover is the kingโs duplicitous counsel. Martin Luther King Jr. is an allied monarch with his own kingdom to
attend to. Schenkkanโs script renders one of the most tumultuous times in modern American history as something timeless, and Johnson as the only man
who can hold it together, at great personal cost.
Jack Willis has been playing Johnson in All the Way for a while now; he originated the role at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival in 2012. (Bryan
Cranston played Johnson during the playโs Tony Awardโwinning Broadway run.) And he brings some of that lived-in feel to the
role at the Rep; heโll occasionally fumble a line not because heโs unfamiliar with the text, but maybe because heโs a little too familiar
with it. But he brings an undeniable intelligence to the part. His Johnson isnโt as handsy as he should be, but heโs absolutely interested in
playing politics at all times. In the first scene, Johnson has just been sworn in as president and is on the plane back to Washington, DC, talking about
the toll that Kennedyโs passing will take on the nation. Heโs aspiring to grandiloquence, but then he stops and snaps to his wife, Lady Bird,
that she has to fix her lipstick. Itโs a savage snarl that comes from nowhere and recedes immediately, and Willis sells it well. Johnson
doesnโt see himself as a terrible bully; he thinks heโs giving his everything to history, and he canโt stand the thought that everyone
around him isnโt sacrificing as much as he is.
Every stage interpretation of Johnson is bound to be different, of course, and what Willis specializes in is Johnsonโs double-sidedness. One moment,
heโs vowing to โout-Roosevelt Rooseveltโ when it comes to social programs that help the poor and minorities, the next heโs bitching
about a โnigra comedianโ who makes fun of him, or dropping the N-bomb left and right, or trying to pal around with a potential ally by talking
about scoring some โpussy,โ or telling a folksy story about a rattlesnake. Heโs somehow entirely unpredictable and also a master of
self-control. He knows everyoneโs weaknesses and he understands how to manipulate whatever he wants out of whomever he wants, but he has to do it
flamboyantly so people know theyโve been played. He canโt be subtle about his machinations, he has to autograph the deal with a flourish, and
itโs that spark of personality that gets him into trouble.
At first, I thought Willis didnโt pay enough attention to Johnsonโs gaping neediness, the huge black hole at the heart of the man. But then I
saw that Schenkkanโs script reveals the neediness almost as a plot point, in a dark night of the presidentโs soul in the second act. Itโs
a strange decisionโeven in archival clips, you can see Johnson desperate for attention and approval at the lamest of press conferencesโbut
Willis successfully turns the most powerful man in the world into a petulant toddler, whining about a few nasty critics even as he enjoys abnormally high
popularity poll numbers for a modern president.
Seattle Repertory Theatre treats All the Way like a blockbuster, spending what appears to be a hell of a lot of cash on every aspect of its lavish
production. Christopher Aceboโs set design for All the Wayโthe same set the Oregon Shakespeare Company used for its original
stagingโis meant to evoke the floor of Congress, with burnished wood viewing boxes ringing the back and sides of the stage. Itโs an astute
choiceโthe design not only looks political, but also reinforces the idea that Johnson is being watched from all angles at all times. All that onstage
seating means the actual space for actors is limited, but itโs used to great effect: A trapdoor in the center of the stage used to raise and lower
the presidentโs desk doubles as the shallow grave of a young man killed for the color of his skin. As Johnson sits in the Oval Office discussing the
crime, a gravedigger is shoveling not five feet away from him. There are almost 20 actors in the cast, but clever staging makes it feel like there are five
times as many working in the production. The almost three-hour play must be exhausting to put onโthereโs a gospel church number, a political
convention, a Nobel Prize ceremony, and dozens of other scenesโbut it feels effortless.
For the most part, the cast is very strong, with some cartoonish lapses. Richard Elmoreโs J. Edgar Hoover is an appropriately curious mix of sinister
plotting and craven obsequiousness, though he occasionally falls into caricatured villainy in the scenes when he plots his vengeance on Martin Luther King
Jr. As Hubert Humphrey, Johnsonโs lapdog and aspiring second-in-command, Peter Frechette brings a sweaty Jack Lemmon feel to the character, but every
once in awhile, his broadness needs some reining in. Half the time, through her extravagant accent, itโs impossible to understand what the hell Terri
McMahonโs Lady Bird Johnson is saying, although she doesnโt have much to do here anyway; this is not a play with showcase roles for women. The
biggest foil to Johnson is Kenajuan Bentleyโs Martin Luther King Jr., and he easily holds his own against Willisโs practiced gravitas,
especially in a scene where King has to consider a compromise that could score him political points but would leave his followers feeling enraged and
ignored. The two men need each other, but they also have different goals. That friction reaches a satisfying conclusion in the final scenes of the play.
During All the Wayโs intermission, youโll likely overhear a lot of people announcing with a self-congratulatory air that they see a
lot of parallels between the play and the America of 2014. Theyโll say that President Obamaโs situation is very similar to President
Johnsonโs. And it is. Kind of. Weโre still dealing with some of the same issues today; the Supreme Court recently rolled back voting rights
laws to something much closer to the America we see at the beginning of All the Way, intentionally alienating minority voters from polling
stations. But thereโs no drama in politics today the way there was back in Johnsonโs day, when politicians were friendly even as they were
stabbing each other in the ribs. Itโs hard to picture anyone 50 years from now writing a play about the impasse between President Obama and Speaker
John Boehner. Any first-year improv player could tell you that thereโs nothing interesting about a bunch of people saying โnoโ all the
time.
