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Cobb (play)

Cobb is a memory play written by Lee Blessing about the baseball player Ty Cobb. The play originally premiered in 1989 at the Yale Repertory Theater in New Haven, starring Chris Cooper and Delroy Lindo. It later ran off-Broadway in 2000 at the Lucille Lortel Theater.

Plot
The play's plot proceeds as a series of monologues about the life of Ty Cobb and his era of baseball. Three versions of Cobb at different ages talk about their memory of their life in baseball, with Negro leagues player Oscar Charleston also appearing to correct or challenge Cobb's perspective. The play is one-act with no intermission. The Peach reflects on Cobb's early playing career and the murder of his father by his mother when Cobb was 18. He also gleefully speaks on how he would pick fights on and off the field, often with black people. The character Ty re-frames his violent tendencies as something he would do to throw off his competitors. He also expresses bitterness at his divorce, his unpopularity, and the course baseball has taken by the end of his career. Mr. Cobb again reframes aspects of his life, taking a more melancholic view. Though he was chosen to be part of the first class of Baseball Hall of Fame inductees, he feels that baseball left him behind. In one monologue, Ty describes his process to scoring runs by taunting the pitcher, using his sharpened cleat-spikes to intimidate infielders, and manufacturing bases before he ultimately steals home. He expresses his resentment of Babe Ruth, who both shifted playing style away from Cobb's small-ball style toward his own long-ball style and who became beloved among fans. Ruth reappears in the dialogue as a foil for Cobb, with set decorations often displaying his image. Oscar Charleston often appears throughout the narrative, to talk about his own playing career and antagonize the various Cobbs. Charleston was himself a superlative player and a center-fielder with a known temper, so he was referred to as the "Black Cobb" by the white baseball press. Though Cobb's Detroit Tigers occasionally played exhibition games against Charleston's Indianapolis ABCs between 1915 and 1923, Cobb would refuse to participate. Charleston taunts the Cobbs that he was the better player, unfalsifiable as they never played each other on the diamond. == Characters ==
Characters
The play features a cast of four actors. Three play Cobb at different points in his life, both remembering his career and reflecting on his image. • The Peach: Taken from Cobb's nickname "The Georgia Peach," this character is Cobb at 19, early in his major league career. The Peach revels in Cobb's violence toward other players, fans, and bystanders, including his many black victims. He also reflects on the murder of his father by his mother, which occurred when Cobb was 18. • Ty: Cobb, in his 40s, at the end of his baseball career. Costumed in a pinstripe suit, Ty boasts about his smart business decisions as a self-made millionaire and his tactical expertise. Ty expresses more bitterness than The Peach, especially in the context of his divorce and Babe Ruth. • Mr. Cobb: Cobb on death's doorstep, after he has been inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame. Mr. Cobb reflects on his bad image, the consequences of his youthful behavior, and how the sport has left him behind. A fourth actor plays Oscar Charleston, Cobb's contemporary who played in the Negro leagues. Due to his excellence and his style of play, he was referred to as the "Black Cobb," which he resents. Charleston frequently challenges the memory of the three Cobbs and taunts them for his refusal to play against him in various exhibition games from 1915 to 1923. == Development ==
Development
Playwright Lee Blessing drew inspiration for the play after reading the 1984 biography Ty Cobb by Charles Alexander. He found Cobb a uniquely unsentimental figure in the generally romantic sport of baseball. Blessing also wanted to explore the sport of baseball—which he had previously in Old-Timers Game (1982)—and how Cobb made a historic innovation in the sport, which he compared to the way William T. Sherman changed warfare. and received a nomination for the Tony Award for Best Play in 1988. Following its premiere at Yale Rep, the two-hander about American-Soviet relations ran on Broadway starring Robert Prosky and Sam Waterston. Blessing identified Lloyd Richards as the play's champion during its original development. After Richards passed on directing A Walk in the Woods due to scheduling conflicts, he still wanted to work with Blessing. After negative reviews, the play did not receive a commercial production. After seeing a revival in 2000, Kevin Spacey helped fund its off-Broadway stint at the Lucille Lortel Theatre. The impetus for his attending the play was Matthew Mabe, an understudy in The Iceman Cometh with Spacey, who played The Peach. == Reception ==
Reception
New York Times chief theater critic Frank Rich gave a negative review of the Yale Rep premiere. Though he lauded Richards's direction of the "excellent cast," Rich referred to the play's themes about America, mythology, and baseball as "intellectually shallow and dramatically inert." He likewise criticized the role that Charleston's character plays in the narrative. "The burden of representing all victims of racism and segregation—in Cobb's society and in baseball—robs the character of his individuality, turning him into a blandly angelic archetype. Worse, Mr. Blessing implies that Cobb's and baseball's deep-rooted bigotry might have been ameliorated if only a Cobb and a Charleston had faced each other on the field or on the bench." In a review of a 2002 production at Burbank's Falcon Theatre—featuring the off-Broadway cast, with Richard Brooks as Charleston—Los Angeles Times reviewer Sean Mitchell wrote that the play was "limited by a writer's fantasy," though also "more real and memorable than anything you’re likely to see on the ESPN Classic channel." ==Awards==
Awards
The cast in the off-Broadway production of Cobb at the Lucille Lortel Theatre in New York was awarded the 2001 Drama Desk Special Award for Outstanding Ensemble Performance by Michael Cullen, Clark Jackson, Matthew Mabe, and Michael Sabatino. == See also ==
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