By Christopher Wallenberg
12 Aug 2008
![]() |
|
| Amy Morton in August: Osage County |
|
| Photo by Joan Marcus |
*
Among the pill-popping, bed-hopping, cousin-kissing clan in Tracy Letts' dysfunctional family drama August: Osage County, Barbara, the eldest daughter of the warring Westons, stands as the character the audience seems to connect with most deeply with. Your affection for her is due in no small part to the prodigious talents of Amy Morton, who bagged Tony and Drama Desk nominations for her performance in the play.
As soon as the character barges on to the stage, you're instantly enraptured. She's whipsmart, savagely funny, and tough as sheetmetal. No matter what monkeywrench is being thrown her way — having to identify the decomposed corpse of her dead father, battling her vicious, Percoset-addled mother during the Family Dinner From Hell, or trying to make sense of her disintegrating marriage — Morton as Barbara is the picture of ferociously funny, steely-eyed determination.
The suburban Chicago-born-and-bred actress says that her own connection with the character was immediate. "The way her words fell out of my mouth felt really comfortable," she says. And what words they are. Morton gets to cuss up a storm and snarl such priceless gems as, "At least do me the courtesy of recognizing when I'm demeaning you," to the likes of her philandering husband.
Not for the faint of heart, the roller-coaster ride of August: Osage County — which captured both the Pulitzer Prize and a wheelbarrow full of Tonys, including Best Play — revolves around three generations of the Weston clan of Oklahoma and stands as a case study in the devastation that only intimate relatives can inflict upon one another. When the patriarch, an award-winning poet with suicidal tendencies, disappears one summer, his drug-hazed wife, Violet, beckons her brood back to the family homestead, where she proceeds to guilt-trip, manipulate and eviscerate them with zingers so corrosive the whole house seems to melt the minute she opens her mouth. "Hopefully watching the show makes you feel better about your family. But if it doesn't, I'm really sorry," says Morton with a lopsided grin. Continued...




