Lilly Wilton and Joshua Willis. Photo by Curt Henderson |
We are so used to hyper-editing in films and television
shows, those fast cuts that we often comprehend almost subliminally, as well as
the rat-a-tat dialogue that many playwrights assault us with, that settling down
to watch a play that unfolds in less than warp speed may at first be a bit discomforting.
We want things to happen…now…and then other things to happen right on their
heels. Our theater-going metabolism demands fast food, our mental clocks
require we always ride the express. Well, if you want to enjoy Last Train to Nibroc, a two-hander by
Arlene Hutton that recently opened at Playhouse on Park, you’re just going to
have to cool your jets a bit and accept that a local train will eventually get
to its destination.
Set initially on a train traveling from Los
Angeles in 1940 and then in rural Kentucky in ’42 and ‘43, Nibroc chronicles the growing
relationship between a somewhat uptight May (Lilly Wilton) and Raleigh (Joshua
Willis). She is returning from California
after an unsuccessful visit with her fiancé and he has just been discharged
from the service for medical reasons. They strike up a tentative conversation
that reveals, among other things, that two corpses are heading East with them,
those of Nathaniel West and F. Scott Fitzgerald, both tucked away in their
caskets in the baggage car, an interesting historical tidbit that Hutton really
doesn’t do much with.
The three scenes that comprise the play (there is no
intermission) can be viewed as a When Harry
Met Sally in slow-motion. Thus, the heart of the play is the interaction
between May and Raleigh
and the conflict can be found in whether or not they will eventually realize
that they are soul-mates and do something about it. It’s a tried and true formula
that never ceases to please.
This is basic theater, as the sparse yet utilitarian set by
Tina Louise Jones suggests, and your response will be dictated by whether or
not you care about May and Raleigh and want them to be together, which means
that it all hinges on the actors in these two roles. As directed by Sean
Harris, Wilton
and Willis deliver the needed chemistry, though there are moments when you
sense that lines are being spoken rather than characters are interacting, but I
sense this will disappear during the show’s run.
It takes awhile but, yes, you eventually get to care about
May and Raleigh , and this culminates in the
delightful third scene built around a misunderstanding on May’s part of Raleigh ’s illness, a
scene that Harris has blocked engagingly. It is also here that the actors seem
to completely embrace their roles.
This production, which runs through May 14, will definitely
mature in nuance and subtlety with each performance, and the classic formula of
boy-meets-girl, boy-loses-girl, boy-wins-girl, is in our DNA. We’ve saw it –
Oops, seen it -- a hundred times before and it still resonates. In essence, Last Train to Nibroc is a gentle
unveiling of two hearts that eventually find that they beat as one. What’s not
to like?