A DEFT WAY TO DEAL WITH 9/11 AFTERMATH.Byline: Evan Henerson Theater Critic The 9/11 play as we know it has taken a turn for the indescribable. Attention should be paid. The events of ``Recent Tragic Events,'' winningly performed at NoHo's Theatre Tribe, center around an existential all-nighter in a Minnesota apartment on Sept. 12, 2001. The participants are an advertising executive, her bookstore manager blind date, a Kramerian neighbor and his zonked-out squeeze. Making things even more cosmically delightful, playwright Craig Wright Craig Wright can refer to the following:
Noun, pl sounds artificially produced to make a play, esp. a radio play, more realistic sound effects npl → efectos mpl sonoros used for comic purposes, and author Joyce Carol Oates Noun 1. Joyce Carol Oates - United States writer (born in 1938) Oates portrayed by a sock puppet A phony name made up by a user in order to masquerade as someone else on the Internet. Sock puppets can make controversial comments or vote for or against a cause without revealing their identity. and voiced by the bare-bottomed actress playing the aforementioned neighbor's girlfriend. Crazy stuff, this, but powerful and affecting nonetheless. Director Stuart Rogers has, in effect, melded two plays together: a kooky first encounter between a man and woman who might be too well- matched and a painful meditation on freedom, free will and determinism. In the course of a single evening, the fate of a character we never meet becomes vitally important to our heroine, her date and -- by extension -- to us. Rogers and his deft ensemble work Wright's grab bag grab bag n. 1. A container filled with articles, such as party gifts, to be drawn unseen. 2. Slang A miscellaneous collection: The meeting evolved into a grab bag of petty complaints. with real skill. It can be no easy prospect working ``Tragic Events''' humor and tonal shifts, but the Tribe is on sure ground. < Things start innocently enough. Andrew (played by Nathan Brooks Burgess) arrives, twitchy twitch·y adj. twitch·i·er, twitch·i·est 1. Characterized by jerky or spasmodic motion: the twitchy whiskers of a cat. 2. Nervous; jittery. and anxious, at the apartment (open, expansive and quite tastefully taste·ful adj. 1. Having, showing, or being in keeping with good taste. 2. Pleasing in flavor; tasty. taste designed by Jeff McLaughlin) of Waverly (Dawn Burgess). This is a first date, and Andrew is early, meaning Waverly needs some time to dress and dry her hair. A perusal at the books on Waverly's shelf is enough to temporarily send a panicked Andrew fleeing from the apartment. And he gets locked out. Let's back up a second. Before Andrew and Waverly meet, stage manager Kyle Colerider-Krugh has asked an audience member to flip a coin, and informed us that the heads or tails this side or that side; this thing or that; - a phrase used in throwing a coin to decide a choice, question, or stake, head being the side of the coin bearing the effigy or principal figure (or, in case there is no head or face on either side, that side which has result dictates the play's sequence of events. A soft beep -- heard periodically -- signals something that might have changed had the coin landed differently. Which makes for some mind-bending contemplation when you get a series of staccato beeps during the discussion of pizza toppings. Back to the play. Before Andrew and Waverly can actually go on their date, the apartment is invaded by Waverly's best bud from down the hall, Ron (Drake Simpson). The news coverage churning out updates on Waverly's TV serves a vital purpose since Waverly's twin sister, Wendy, a New Yorker, has not been heard from since the towers fell. With the phone constantly ringing, a distracted Waverly decides she'd rather stay in. Andrew and Ron remain as well. The aforementioned guests (in the form of Tara Orr, actress and sock puppet wielder) arrive to complete the party. The world may indeed be in crazy tragic flux, and one of the characters may -- through sheer coincidence -- possess some critical information. Inside Waverly's apartment, however, the beer flows, games are played and the discussion gets meaty. Orr, so rag doll and glazed as Ron's girlfriend Nancy, is whip smart and insightful as the voice of Oates (hiding behind her own hair, she brings off the ventriloquism ventriloquism: see puppet. ventriloquism Art of “throwing” one's voice in such a way that the sound seems to come from a source other than the speaker. splendidly). Oates' philosophical tete a tete Adv. 1. tete a tete - without the intrusion of a third person; in intimate privacy; "we talked tete-a-tete" with Simpson's Ron is a thing of beauty, as is the sensitivity with which she has to fend off the questions of an adoring a·dore v. a·dored, a·dor·ing, a·dores v.tr. 1. To worship as God or a god. 2. To regard with deep, often rapturous love. See Synonyms at revere1. 3. Andrew (she's his favorite author, after all). Equally deft is the interplay between shy and conflicted Andrew and brittle, circumstance-crossed Waverly. Dawn and Nathan Burgess (husband and wife off stage) lock into who these characters are, beautifully negotiating the start of a relationship that could develop into something deep and substantial or something that might fall apart before it even gets started. Perhaps Wright could toss a coin and pen a sequel. Evan Henerson, (818) 713-3651 evan.henerson@dailynews.com RECENT TRAGIC EVENTS - Three and one half stars Where: Theatre Tribe, 5267 Lankershim Blvd., North Hollywood. When: 8 p.m. Thursday through Saturday; through July 22. Tickets: $15 to $20. (866) 811-4111 or visit www.theatremania.com. In a nutshell: Even though it's set in Minneapolis, Craig Wright's play makes 9/11 dramatically real. CAPTION(S): photo Photo: Nathan Brooks Burgess, left, Dawn Burgess and Drake Simpson star in the North Hollywood-based Theatre Tribe's Southern California Southern California, also colloquially known as SoCal, is the southern portion of the U.S. state of California. Centered on the cities of Los Angeles and San Diego, Southern California is home to nearly 24 million people and is the nation's second most populated region, premiere of ``Recent Tragic Events.'' |
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