Time Stands Still -- New Milford TheatreWorks -- Thru Aug.
Alicia Dempster, Will Jeffries, Erin Shaighnessy and Aaron Kaplan. All Photos by Richard Pettibone |
It’s easy to see why Donald
Margulies’ Time Stands Still, which
opened on Broadway in 2010 and garnered several Tony nominations, is a favorite
of regional and local theaters (there have been recent productions at Stratford ’s Square One and Hartford ’s TheaterWorks). With its unit set
and four characters, it is relatively economical to produce, plus its classic
form – exposition – rising action – climax – and denouement – is comfortable
territory for most playgoers. Add to this the tightly drawn characters and the
contemporary themes and you have all the ingredients for a crowd-pleaser, and
those who make their way up to New Milford TheatreWorks will, by and large, be
rewarded. As directed by Sonnie Osborne, this two-act examination of
relationships and moral ambiguities both challenges and entertains.
Set in a Williamsburg, Brooklyn,
loft, the play opens with Sarah (Alicia Dempster) and James (Aaron Kaplan)
returning home from Germany, where Sarah has been convalescing after being
severely injured by an explosion of a roadside bomb while covering the war in
Iraq. She is a photojournalist – he is a journalist – and they bear the
physical and psychological scars of their chosen professions. After their
return, what unfolds is a multi-layered examination of the nature of human
commitment and need as well as a struggle to define the moral parameters of
those who are charged with observing and recording mankind’s compelling need to
destroy itself in the name of whatever “ism” is au courant.
Aaron Kaplan and Alicia Dempster |
As a counterpoint to Sarah and
James’ relationship – an 8-year tentative and testy partnership-with-rights
seasoned (and sexually stimulated by) individual and mutual horrific
experiences – is the May-September romance of Richard (Will Jeffries) and Mandy
(Erin Shaughnessy), he a long-time friend of both Sarah and James and a photo
editor for a magazine, a man who has walked around the romantic block several
times, and she a somewhat jejune event planner who could easily be his
daughter. Not to put too facile an interpretation on this duality, the two
couples seem to evoke the yin and yang, the darkness and light that both haunts
and defines relationships, for Sarah and James, in both their professional and
personal lives, deal with death and the end of things, while Richard and Mandy,
as incongruous as their relationship may seem, embrace life and the possibility
of new beginnings.
This may all seem like grim stuff,
and some of it is, what with descriptions of women and children blown apart, flesh
and blood coating the eyes and clothes of the observer, but there is a thread
of humor that runs through the play, driven mainly by Sarah and James’ take on
their friend’s new relationship, captured early on by a delightful double-beat
of silence, complete with diverted eyes and evocative facial expressions, followed
by Richard’s explosive, two-word profanity that never fails to jolt and delight
the audience.
As Sarah, Dempster gives a nuanced
performance, showing us both the hard carapace that allows her to do what she
does and the fragility and uncertainty that lurk beneath. She is an
independent, prickly-pear, a woman who captures, in photo after photo, man’s
inhumanity to man, and to do so she must shut herself off from innate emotions
– she must continuously argue against that part of herself that wishes what she
chronicles would be otherwise. Her camera is her apotropaic defense, for as she
intimately captures carnage there is always a lens between her and horrific reality.
Hers is a demanding yet fulfilling role, and Dempster fills it admirably, using
not only her voice but body language to convey the conflictions that beset her
character.
Alicia Dempster, Aaron Kaplan, Erin Shaughnessy and Will Jeffries |
Kaplan, who plays somewhat of a
weathervane character (i.e., one the audience uses to measure where the moral
center of the play resides), gives James that needed sense of reaching the end
of the road while, at the same time, thirsting for new beginnings. His task is
to reveal the psychological toll taken on men and women who, assignment after
assignment, must objectively report on the
horror while, at the same time, yearn for a supportive, intimate
relationship with a woman who must keep her emotions in check, who weighs
commitment against vulnerability, whose style of communication, when she deigns
to speak, is both terse and acerbic, who folds her arms across her chest to
protect herself from the possibility of caring. Kaplan is extremely successful
in conveying frustration, righteous indignation and an underlying need to
experience a life that is not defined by death, whose idea of sharing a life
encompasses more than enabling.
As the two actors slowly yet
effectively develop their characters, Marguiles script builds an emotional
pressure cooker that eventually explodes near the end of the second act, and it
is here that Dempster and Kaplan especially shine as all of the raw emotions
that they have hinted at yet repressed now flare. It’s primal theater, enhanced
by the lighting design of Richard Pettibone and Scott Wyshynski, for as Dempster
and Kaplan engage their characters for a final confrontation of need, fear and
desire, the lighting subtly changes, diminishes, focusing the audience’s eyes
on the battle – the set, also designed by Pettibone and Wyshynski, falls away
and we are left with two people fighting to define themselves and their
relationship, trying to find common ground in a world of shifting sands.
As the somewhat bemused, avuncular
friend, Jeffries is perfect as a man of a certain age who, tired of having to
justify himself to maintain a relationship in which choosing a restaurant is a
matter of “arbitration,” simply wants to revel in the youth and exuberance of
his newest partner. He creates a nice counterpoint to the inherent turbulence
Sarah and James are experiencing, for he gives us a man who is both world-weary
and accepting, a man who has found a final harbor, and though it may be
imperfect, he is satisfied to moor there, sails furled, bobbing on the gentle
waves that Mandy creates.
Mandy (originally played by Alicia
Silverstone in the play’s first production at the Geffen Playhouse in Los
Angeles in 2009) is a tough role to capture, for she must initially seem to be,
if not witless, at least unseasoned, a babe in the woods who eventually finds
her focus in motherhood while, at the same time, challenging Sarah’s philosophy
of necessary neutrality in the face of human suffering. Shaughnessy, lithe and
pretty, physically embraces the role, but she often seems to be skimming the
surface of her character, aware of whom she is supposed to be playing rather
than simply being the character. She is not helped by Osborne’s direction,
which is almost faultless throughout the evening save for Mandy’s confrontation
scene late in the second act, for Osborne has the actress – or allows the
actress – to break eye contact with her fellow actors, totally opening up
(i.e., facing the audience) and delivering her lines as if they are a
soliloquy, substantially diminishing their emotional impact.
Quibbles aside, TheatreWorks has
boarded a gripping take on Margulies’ excursion into the heart of contemporary
darkness. The intimacy of the theater can’t help but heighten the audience’s
involvement with these four characters as they struggle to define themselves
and their relationships. The play’s final moment, sans dialogue, captures the
voyeuristic nature of our society, though it would have been enhanced with a
flash before blackout rather than a mere whirring focus of a lens -- a
punctuation that startles -- but there’s enough here to engage and generate
drive-home discussions about those who deliver the images and words that
capture the terror, hatred and dread that taints our 21st-century
world (and the toll it takes on them), and those who consume these images as
they thumb through magazines or idly watch the evening news while dining on
take-out.
Time
Stands Still runs through August 1. For tickets or more information call
860-350-6863 or go to www.theatreworks.us.
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