A year and a half ago, Arizona Onstage Productions presented a
one-man show called The Bible Belt … and Other
Accessories
during a dead theatrical period—the days right
after New Year’s. (See “Community Theater,” Jan. 17, 2008.) Not many
people attended the show at first, so now Arizona Onstage is reviving
it—during the dead theatrical period right before Labor Day.

Why now? It’s about the only time that the star, UA theatre arts
major Ryan DeLuca, is available. Explains Arizona Onstage
producer-director Kevin Johnson, “The UA is very possessive of their
theater students, frowning on work with other theater companies during
the school season (unless it is Gaslight or understudy work for Arizona
Theatre Company), so I have to play by their rules.

“I also feel that I am as much (a) theater mentor to Ryan as
director, and I worked my ass off the first time—almost giving up
on him—(I) could not get the ‘rich Jewboy’ out of his voice (and)
bodily kinesthetics.” But the work paid off, and Johnson and DeLuca
bonded during rehearsals.

And DeLuca bonded with his character, a high school student named
Johnny, coming of age as a gay kid in a Texas town overrun with
fundamentalist Christians.

“At first, I didn’t think I had anything in common with Johnny,”
DeLuca admits. “But anyone can find similarities with him, because he’s
a young guy just figuring out what kind of person to be. Johnny wants
everyone else to figure things out, too, and realize how beneficial it
is just to be yourself. I’m nowhere near that right now. I’m trying to
take Johnny’s example and figure out how to live my own life. It’s his
ideas and beliefs that I mostly connect with.”

Despite the odds against him, Johnny gets along with just about
anybody who’s willing to get along with him. His best friend is a
Spanglish-spouting Chicana he works with at Dairy Queen, and one of his
main adult role models is his African American home-ec teacher. Trouble
is, not everybody in Cedar Springs, Texas, embraces uniqueness as
readily as Johnny does.

“So it’s important for Johnny to find a sense of humor in
everything, and find a positive aspect to everything he’s going
through,” DeLuca says. “The biggest part of this story is to make
people understand that you have to find the brighter side.”

Bible Belt is one of a series of plays about Johnny by writer
and performance artist Paul Bonin-Rodriguez. The author was in Tucson a
few weeks ago to polish one of his other plays, and to attend Bible
Belt
rehearsals.

“Ryan’s really great,” Bonin-Rodriguez says. “He pulled out some
moments that I had never seen that way, so the play is really fun to
watch with him. He keeps the rhythm perfectly.”

Bonin-Rodriguez didn’t catch the production last time—and
DeLuca admits he didn’t catch some important things about Johnny the
first time, either.

“I started reading the script again and found so much that I’d
missed,” he says. “I’m a different person now, and different things
stick out to me. Last time, it was a comedy. It’s still very funny, but
this time, I think we can hit some points stronger to reach out more to
people who have gone through this story.

“It’s a different show. The story’s still there, but people will
feel more connected with Johnny this time. It’s a lot deeper than it
was last year.

“Working with Paul was incredible. It’s amazing the way he wrote
this script so that people can play this role differently.”

Comparing DeLuca’s work to his own past performances as Johnny,
Bonin-Rodriguez says, “Ryan wasn’t terribly sissy, if at all, the way I
imagined Johnny, yet he brought a special spirit and innocence. He has
an incredible sweet and genuine quality when he’s happy about
something, and that created a way for me to get to know a different
Johnny. I rediscovered the work in that sense.”

DeLuca says that Johnny is “an average teenager trying to figure out
what the heck is going on in life,” and was heartened when teenagers
started showing up for the last performances of last year’s run.

Says director Johnson, “The initial mount was emotionally rewarding
for me because of many of the families taking their kids to see it,
opening up conversations about not only gender identity, but biased
opinions based on what is considered ‘faith’—of course, this show
strikes a chord with me, being from Texas as well.”

Johnson had DeLuca talk to his dad a few times to listen to his
accent. But what DeLuca is really learning for this role is not an
accent, but an attitude.

“I want to take school more openly, and try to find joys and more
unity in our class,” DeLuca says. “I’m trying to be more optimistic
this year. A lot of that has to do with seeing how Johnny takes things.
This year will be promising, I think.”

One reply on “Figuring Things Out”

  1. I am very excited to see this production again. Ryan’s first performance of this show just blew me away. His personal growth as an actor over this last year, studying at the UA, has added great depth & understanding of the roles he plays.
    I am very excited to see this production again…how amazing it was the first time to see Ryan change from one character to the next and tell this funny, sad and heartfelt story to the audience…and with only one actor on stage! We were all taken in and loved it.
    Break a leg, Ryan.

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