Showing posts with label Flea. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Flea. Show all posts

Friday, September 8, 2017

Inanimate

C+

The Flea Theater has opened its new home on Thomas Street with this production in its Siggy Theater, named for Sigourney Weaver, a Flea founder. (The other two venues have yet to open.) Those familiar with the small downstairs theater in its former home on White Street will feel right at home here. It has similar dimensions — wide and shallow — and is quite intimate. Nick Robideau’s play, written for The Bats, the Flea’s resident company of young actors, is a good choice to carry on the Flea’s reputation for offbeat material. The heroine Erica (an excellent Lacy Allen) is a socially awkward 30-year-old who works as a grocery bagger in a small Massachusetts town. She loses her job when she is spotted talking to the items in a grocery cart. It turns out that she has a condition known as objectum sexualis, which involves attachment to objects rather than people. Her current main attraction is the sign at the local Dairy Queen, affectionately referred to by her as Dee (drolly personified by Philip Feldman). She also has had a thing for her floor lamp (Artem Kreimer), a stuffed animal (Nancy Tatiana Quintana), an Oxo can opener (Michael Oloyede) and assorted other objects. She confides in the equally awkward Kevin (Maki Borden), a former schoolmate of uncertain sexuality who has been working at the DQ for 13 years and who has a crush on her. Encouraged by his sensitive reaction, she finally gets up the nerve to explain things to her sister Trish (Tressa Preston), an ambitious local politician. Sarah Lawrence’s whimsical costumes are wonderful. The set design by Yu-Hsuan Chen makes good use of limited resources. The Bats are clearly enjoying their roles and their enjoyment is infectious. Director Courtney Ulrich’s staging is confident and fluid. The subplot about the sister’s ambitions does not blend well with the rest of the play. At times it is difficult to decide whether the playwright intends for us to feel sympathy or bemused scorn for Erica’s condition. It’s an edgy play that’s not for everyone. Running time: 85 minutes, no intermission.

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Office Hours ***

A.R. Gurney's latest play is a series of related sketches taking place in the offices of the instructors who teach a required Great Books course at an unnamed university in the early 1970's. The play takes us from morning to evening, September to June, Plato to Shakespeare. Written for The Flea Theater's young resident company, The Bats, it provides the opportunity for 6 young actors (actually 12, because there are two alternating casts) to demonstrate their acting chops by taking on 5 roles each. Some of the sketch topics include plagiarism, faculty romance, the ambiguities of mentoring, emerging feminism, the difficulty of engaging students' interests and the fallout from the Vietnam War. Underlying all is the question of whether courses dealing strictly with "dead white men" are still valid. The quality of the sketches was a bit uneven, but the overall effect, for me, was positive. (Caveat: I have always been a Gurney fan and have found even his lesser efforts enjoyable.) On Tuesday nights, there are "pay what you can" performances.