Sunday, April 30, 2023

Gruesome Playground Injuries by Rajiv Joseph


Hope Luna

 

 

By Joe Straw 

A moment is like a shooting star.  If you catch it, it opens the imaginative world of creativity.                 

 

The one thing that justifies an objective in any play is love.  Love, love, love, love and love. Nothing comes close to love.  Love is the thing that gives an actor an objective, a purpose, and that objective is made up of multiple actions that moves the character to their destination. Love comes, and it comes in many forms.

 

Gruesome Playground Injuries by Rajiv Joseph, director by Anna Moskowitz, produced by Drew Woodruff and Andrew Simon, and Executive Produced by Zoe Brown, had a limited 4-performance run at 905 Cole Avenue in Hollywood, California.

 

Kayleen and Doug are eight when they meet.  Possibly a chance meeting in a nurse’s office, possibly not, she with an upset stomach and he with a broken face after riding his bike off the roof of a Catholic school.   Sitting on a couple of cots Kayleen mysteriously says, “There’s an angel on the roof” to which Doug says, “No there’s not.”

 

Thus, a relationship is born, something they will remember the rest of their lives and without thinking about it, a moment that will play an important part in their being. Time is not linear in this play; the moments are a reflection moving back and forth until they reach the age of 38. So, one may suspect the reflections of their lives culminate to the ultimate meeting, however that manifests itself, in their last encounter.

 

There’s a reason a little boy rides his bike off the roof and that is because he wants to impress someone and, in this case, it is a little girl. Relationship don’t always work out like the participants want.  But there is that connection, one of healing, and one of longing, and if someone would only give in to the moment, we might have something.  But they never do, maybe they do, but conflict gets in their way and, they’re too young to know they need each other.  

 

They meet again at 23 years old after Doug’s horrific accident.  Kayleen is there to comfort him, but he crosses the line, her line, for the sake of his pain. She has had too much pain recently and there’s just one more thing to do, one more bridge to cross, one more muddy road to travel, knowing she must get to his side.

 

They encounter each other at the age of 13, an eight-grade dance.  Doug dances into the room.  He has hurt his foot. Kayleen has an upset stomach and Doug wants to help.  He even offers her ginger ale. But even in this situation, there is no meeting of the minds, and Doug tries to physically dance with her to no avail, and then kiss her, no chance but there is that thing of staying in the room next to someone who may be the one, despite being thirteen and all.

 

When Kayleen finally makes a connection at the age of 28, Kayleen throws her heart out to Doug who lies there, in a coma, without the ability to connect. But she is there, his angel, if only he could move and speak, no matter, Doug is listening, and he’ll take whatever makes him feel better and reflect upon it later.  

 

One can listen to Rajiv Joseph’s words and come up will a million possibilities, or ways, the material can manifest itself in this play first produced in 2009 at the Alley Theatre in Houston, Texas.  Reflection moves one in a way that time is not linear and important matters are accentuated when thinking about the how you came to be, why you are, and who you are now. The play starts at age 8 and moves back and forth until it ends at age 38. Gruesome Playground Injuries is a brilliant one-act play, with the bitterest of contradictions, and ambiguous enough to give many interpretations to the same play with various directors.

 

Anna Moskowitz, the director, has placed her stamp on the play giving us a very likeable and engaging production given the offbeat location of the performance area. One likens it to a once used editing room of an independent film production company now used as Anthony Meindl’s Actors Workshop and this may be a perfect location for that purpose.  But now, on this night, it is used for a performance space, 43 people enclosed on either size of a long tube-like performance area with the audience on either end of the playing area (stage) and one exit door and that lends itself to some logistic problems of viewing the play. In the moments that mattered, that moved the play forward, seen reactions were blocked.  For example, Kayleen taking the stones out of Doug’s hands and seeing his reaction at his angel.  Also, at times the actors were so far apart that one was moving the head back and forth as though it were a tennis match.  This is a very intimate production, that needed the actors to be center stage and mixing it up especially when moments mattered the most. How intimate can you be when the characters want to be so far from each other is the engaging trick of the play. Also, changing clothes during play presented other problems and requires a little more creativity to keep the audience engaged in their lives during those changes.   Still, it was a very enjoyable night at the theatre.

 

How weird was it that Hope Luna’s character was listed as “Doug” on the program that was scanned via QR Code. One set of someone’s tired eyes. (I get it.)

 

Hope Luna nails the first scene as an eight-year-old student with very expressive eyes and is engaging throughout. There are multiple things in Kayleen’s backstory that plays an important part in creating a fully rounded character.  One is the abandonment of her mother, the other is the non-existent relationship she has with her father who, she still lives with and, who thinks her mother was a better person than she will ever be. Certainly, it plays a part of her not understanding how anyone can love her no matter how much they profess their love.

 

Andrew Simon

 

 

Andrew Simon does well as Doug. Doug does his best to show his love despite not being able find a way to fully engage in a manner that captures her spirit. Every gruesome thing he does is for the capture of his love is lost in something he can’t really grasp. His reactions to winning her love is offbeat (the fireworks), or violence, or saving the angel that she once loved. How many ways do you have to show you love someone before they finally believe you? For Simon to find the levels of engagements requires a deeper level of emotional commitment, one that says you’ve love so much until you can’t give it any longer.  At times one question the choices Simon made, one being the vigorous dancing scene when he has a bad foot.  Each level of injury seems to be for the benefit of engaging with his love and that didn’t really happen in this version of the play. Despite that, Simon is a very creative actor showing flashing of brilliance and has a very strong stage presence. Simon also served as a producer.

 

The only thing resembling a set is the elementary posters on the wall that may have symbolized the place where the characters met.

 

Laura Gonzalez created the character’s look as the Costume Designer and that was effective from age eight to thirty-eight.

 

Low level lighting by Alicia Esparza, Lighting Designer, did not accentuate the cutting marks on Kayleen’s legs and that would have help moved the story along tremendously.  

 

Other members of the crew are as follows:

 

Chelsea M Matthews – Executive Producer

Robin Schultz – Venue Manager

Emily Vanni – Production Assistant

Ally Lardner – Stage & Production Manager

Aubrey Salita – Assistant Director

Spencer Drees – Creative Consultant

Glenn Schuster – Sound Designer

Felicia Cantu – Assistant Stage Manager

 

This show has closed.

 

   

 

   

Sunday, April 23, 2023

Picnic by William Inge

 

Monti D. Washington and Mattie Harris Lowe - Photos by Jenny Graham

 

By Joe Straw

 

There is a particular moment in John Formanesh-Bocca’s version of Picnic by William Inge when an audible gasp erupted and stunned the audience.   That sublime moment, on this night, jarred the senses and catapulted a relationship onstage up through the stratosphere.   

 

And yet, there were two perspectives on the outcome of that intimate moment.  One perspective was that the relationship would never work and that the love of these two people would ultimately fail in dramatic disrepair (mine).  While another, the optimist, might dream of the unlimited possibilities these two can create as they move together through life. (not mine)

 

The Odyssey Theatre Ensemble presents Picnic by William Inge, produced in association with Isabel and Harvey Kibel and directed by John Farmanesh-Bocca through May 28th, 2023.

 

A small, isolated town in Kansas can be the loneliest place on the planet, especially for single women who inhabit the barren aridity of the rural countryside waiting for someone to take them away, away from the flat landscape and into hills and valleys of an adventurous life. The only thing giving them vivacity now is the radio that sits in the window, playing an occasional song that moves people in unexpected ways on this Labor Day weekend. 

 

And it’s all coming from the house of Mrs. Helen Potts (Rosemary Thomas). She has seen better days, but today is a special day for her. As luck would have it, she has just fed a transient Hal Carter (Monti D. Washington). He is a good-looking athletic man who seemingly is down on his luck.  His clothes are stained with road travel and Hal has agreed to do some chores in exchange for something to eat.

 

This is something Mrs. Potts does from time to time, picking up strays deposited from a passing train, but this time she has got a catch. Mrs. Potts is a lonely woman, whose continual job now is to take care of her sickly mother who shouts for help from an upstairs bedroom but is never seen.  

 

(Hal is there for something else but will ride this train until something better comes along.)

 

Mrs. Potts is naturally smitten with the younger Hal and wants to keep him around her country home, feeding him her finest country meal, and if that includes washing the clothes off his back to keep him there longer so be it.

 

Hal moves off to take care of the chores and suddenly, for a moment, the place becomes man less.  

 

Rogelio Douglas III and Symphony Canady

 

 

From the back porch of another house, across the way in the perfect quietude, Millie Owens (Symphony Canady) 14 grabs a beach like chair and decides to take in the warmth of the sun. Add to it a little lotion, a set of cool shades, and she basks in all her summer glory when Bomber (Rogelio Douglas III), delivering newspapers, rides in on his bike. (Note: make the bike a little noisier, put cards in the spokes.)

 

Bomber tries to make himself known to Millie, but she ignores him like the plague. Definitively, he throws the newspaper against her house and makes a terrible racket. Bomber, knowing her arm strength, hops on a bike and flees the scene. Millie takes that paper, winds up like a centerfielder and throws it at him, like throwing a runner out at home plate.

 

Madge Owens (Mattie Harris Lowe) steps out on her back porch. She is radiant, the sunlight catching her finer points, and reflecting her beauty all the way over to Hal who suddenly appears.  

 

Flo Owens (Yolanda Snowball), her mother, sizes up the situation, and wants Hal to keep his distance knowing right away that that man is an augury for no good and besides Madge is already spoken for.  

 

Now, everyone wants to peek at this mysterious man including Rosemary Sydney (Sydney A. Mason) a schoolmarm, and a border in the Flo’s house who teaches typing and shorthand.  Dressed in her finest, she has yet to find a prospect but is hopeful the picnic on this night will solidify matters with her on again off again beau Howard Bevan (Derrick Parker), a man that one, takes delight in the bottle and two, takes marriage with a grain of salt.  

 

And while everyone agrees the transient Hal is not to be completely trusted things change when Alan Seymour (Ahkei Togun), Madge’s boyfriend, recognizes Hal as his fraternity brother from college.

 

John Farmanesh-Bocca’s production of Picnic is brilliant.  It is a subtle slice of Americana told from a different perspective with a beautifully diverse cast.  Its contents breaths human hunger for wants not satiated from the sustenance of a picnic and ends with the socially repugnant and execrable act of treachery.  After a few moments of settling down on this night, the play and this production takes off and soars.  It is beautiful in the way the sunset takes your breath away and moves one toward the warm feelings of anticipating the night.  

 

Symphony Canady is fantastic as Millie Owens a young woman that can do anything better than her sister but vie for the attention of any male within throwing distance. She’s athletic, cooks, is intelligent and is an artist as well. Moving in the direction of being the leading woman of that household has its challenges, but Canady makes some terrific choices that has her character ascends into the night.

 

Rogelio Douglas III does a nice turn as Bomber but needs a stronger objective and choices to get where he needs to go. It’s all there but he needs to make some slight adjustments.

 

Mattie Harris Lowe is striking as Madge and that character can capture men within a fifty-mile radius. It’s unfortunate that the man she wants is 51 miles away so her mind wanders about things that could be. She is not much for cooking.  Peeling one potato is a chore that takes longer than necessary and leaves the skin still intact in some places. She is a woman who is tired of her current surroundings and wants to move on. This is a very grand performance of a woman torn between two lovers.  She must make up her mind and not take into consideration the feelings for her mother and sister.

 

Sydney A. Mason and Derrick Parker

 

 

Sydney A. Mason is wonderful as Rosemary Sydney.  It is a character driven performance that is carefully crafted with so much underlying truth.  From the moment she steps on stage until the curtain call Mason is riveting.

 

The same holds true with Derrick Parker as Howard Bevans, a man who has lived a successful life and doesn’t want that life interrupted with this little thing called marriage. Parker’s craft is excellent as he weaves his way through multiple conflicts on stage.  It is subtle at times, but he has a very commanding stage presence, and the work moves toward perfection.

 

You couldn’t ask for a better Flo Owens than Yolanda Snowball’s performance. She is a mother who lives for her children and wants the best for both.  She guides them through life and tries her best to keep her oldest on track. Not everything goes according to plan, but it is obvious she loves both and would do anything for them.

 

Rosemary Thomas is Mrs. Helen Potts and aside from the opening moments the character grows every moment on stage, and she is wonderful in the role.

 

Ahkei Togun and Monti D. Washington

 

 

One is not too sure about the beard Ahkei Togun has as Alan Seymour for that 1960’s time period, the position he has in the community, and the successful job he has. He is the man that is the opposite of the man who has just arrived. That aside, his work is terrific.  Seymour makes a big mistake before the picnic, trusting everyone, and finds later that working to secure the trust is a job in and of itself, and that mistake was the source of his downfall.  The moment he arrives after the picnic is a heartbreaking moment and he gathers enough courage to say what he needs to say before the arrival of the tempestuous dawn. He shows little of the shamefaced regret stopping at nothing to win at all costs.

 

Monti D. Washington plays Hal Carter who is likeable but has made some very bad choices in life. There is enough ambiguity in William Inge’s play to make Hal the perplexing character that he is. Washington is excellent and, one supposes, that despite the physical beast that he is, he is not the only bad character in this play. But, then again, maybe he is. He appears on stage as a transient only to find that he has other motives in mind and perhaps he is not a reliable reporter of the truth.  

 

 

Erika L. Holmes has some outstanding scenes as Irma Kronkite as well as Caitlin O’Grady as Christine Schoewalder.

 

Frederica Nasciemento, Scenic Designer, has created a beautiful functional set for the actors working their magic.

 

Mylette Nora, Costume Designer, has perfected the look of the characters stepping off into the 1960s.

 

Other members of this delightful crew are as follows:

 

Chu-Hsuan Chang – Lighting Designer

Brianna Price – Co-Choreographer

Jeff Gardner – Co-Sound Designer

Chris Bell – Scenic Artist

Jeanine MacDonald – Properties Designer

Terrance Stewart – Stage Manager

Andrew Blahak – Assistant State Manager

Ron Sossi – Artistic Director

Beth Hogan – Staff Producer

Leonard Felix, Danny Felix, Mikaela Liewer – Master Carpenters

Jason Detamore, Lenny Felix – Set Construction

Danny Felix – Master Electrician

Matthew Duran – Light Crew

Lucy Pollak – Publicist

Photography – Jenny Graham

Peter Simpson Cook – Graphic Designer (The one sheets look terrific!)

 

Run! Run! Run! And see this show. 

 

Odyssey Theatre Ensemble

2055 South Sepulveda Blvd. 

Los Angeles, CA  90025

 

Box Office: 310-477-2055

boxoffice@odysseytheatre.com

www.odysseytheatre.com