Dinner at the Harbor Reef

"Dinner at the Harbor Reef" is a what-if take on a famous true-life tragedy: the drowning death of actress Natalie Wood in November, 1981. What happened the night of her death has been widely reported and debated. But one event that’s gone relatively undiscussed and unaccounted for is the dinner that Wood, husband Robert Wagner, Wood’s friend/co-star Christopher Walken and the Wagners’ boat captain, Dennis...

"Dinner at the Harbor Reef" is a what-if take on a famous true-life tragedy: the drowning death of actress Natalie Wood in November, 1981. What happened the night of her death has been widely reported and debated. But one event that’s gone relatively undiscussed and unaccounted for is the dinner that Wood, husband Robert Wagner, Wood’s friend/co-star Christopher Walken and the Wagners’ boat captain, Dennis Davern, shared at Catalina, CA restaurant Doug’s Harbor Reef a few hours before Wood drowned.

There was reportedly lots of contention, drinking and some drug use over the course of the dinner’s three-plus hours. But what really happened? What was discussed? What was the group dynamic? What could’ve gone on that was so troubling that it led to escalated arguing between Wood and Wagner when they returned to the yacht--and to Wood’s later exit from the boat into the dark, icy waters?

The play, featuring the four real-life characters above along with a fictional waitress, is conceived as a largely realistic, two-act, five-character drama set in and outside the restaurant. It follows the dinner over the course of the night, using the characters’ truths and histories as we know them to conjecture how the evening may have led to Wood’s demise. I call it "Fiction based on fact, rumor and Hollywood."

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Dinner at the Harbor Reef

Natalie (Wood), 43: classily, accessibly beautiful; dark hair and eyes, slender but shapely. The girl next door meets “Mrs. Robinson.”

Robert “R.J.” (Wagner), 51: rakishly handsome, dark hair, darker stare, classic “old
Hollywood” good looks.

Christopher (Walken), 38: puckishly attractive, high cheekbones, high brown hair, wry smile, knowing eyes, rangy build.

Dennis Davern (boat captain), early 30s: curly reddish-brown hair, beard, aviator glasses, outdoorsy.
Sandy (waitress), early 20s: blonde, pretty, wide-eyed, ex-high school cheerleader type.

Development History

  • Type Reading, Organization Theatre 40, Beverly Hills, Year 2019