Nick Raines, Ali Bernhardt, Sumiah Gay, Maya Jennings Daley, Lana Peck, David Fritsch Photo by Richard Pettibone |
You
don’t have to be a Chekhov aficionado to enjoy Christopher’s Durang’s dark
comedy, “Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike,” which recently opened at
TheatreWorks New Milford under the capable direction of Jocelyn Beard. However,
if you have at least a passing familiarity with Chekhov’s plays, then the names
of three of the main characters will ring a bell, as will some of the plot
points in Durang’s play, which is set in Bucks County, PA. You will also
register the emotional travails that haunt Vanya, Sonia and Masha as they
constantly analyze their lives and bemoan their fates. However, this is a
comedy, and the cast, by and large, delivers the goods along with several
standout performances. All in all, this production is proof that “small”
theatrical venues can offer professional, intriguing – and often entrancing –
theater.
So, the
set-up and the plot: we have a brother and a sister, Vanya (David Fritsch) and
Sonia (Lana Peck), who have lived together since childhood in a house now owned
by their sister Masha (Ali Bernhardt), a fading movie actress who pays all the
household bills and gives her siblings a monthly stipend. Vanya and Sonia,
whose lives have settled into a bickering routine, have never worked, have no
manifest skills, and their one claim to fame is that they took care of their
aging parents into their dotage. One of their primary topics of conversation is
about a blue heron who occasionally visits the pond in front of their house.
The oft-spoken question of the day: will the bird return?
After
Vanya and Sonia’s relationship is established, enter Masha, who has come home
to attend a costume party hosted by an influential neighbor who lives in a
house once owned by Dorothy Parker. In tow is Spike (Nick Raines), Masha’s
current boy-toy, whom she uses to dissipate the pain of her five failed
marriages. They are greeted by Vanya and Sonia’s cleaning lady, Cassandra
(Sumiah Gay) who, true to her name, is inclined to prophesy, utterances that no
one takes seriously. They are soon visited by Nina (Maya Jennings Daley), a
neighbor and aspiring actress who desperately wants to meet Masha. There you
have it. Most of the rest of the first act, and well into the second act,
involves preparations for the costume party, to which all of the characters are
invited, and the party’s aftermath.
The
play, which won both a Tony and a Drama Desk award for Best Play, references Chekhov’s
dramas but is not slavishly adherent to the characters that Chekhov created. In
fact, the siblings were named by their professorial parents because the parents
admired Chekhov. Yes, there’s a cherry orchard, although the characters argue
over whether nine or ten trees constitute an “orchard,” and there is a lot of
sibling arguments, plus the possibility that Vanya and Sonia might lose their
ancestral home and the fact that Vanya has secretly written a play inspired by
a character in “The Seagull,” Konstantin, who wrote a symbolist drama.
What about
the production itself? Well, it runs smoothly although some of the performances
are a bit uneven. Bernhardt, as Masha, is at moments just a tad too strident.
Yes, she’s supposed to be manipulative, high-strung and self-absorbed, but she
often delivers her lines as if she is Bette Davis on uppers. A bit of
modulation might be in order. The other performance that might create a bit of
a frown is Daley’s as the somewhat naïve Nina (also a name from a Chekhov
play). It’s the ingénue role, and Daley “ingenues” it to the hilt. A little
less sugar and just a bit more spice might enhance the performance. I mean, how
“nice” can you be when you want to go to a costume party as a princess but are
forced to go as Dopey the Dwarf (great costume by designer Sue Haneman) to
satisfy someone else’s ego?
As for
the other four actors, they all provide solid performances. Raines’ Spike is
dead-on as the mindless, unsuccessful actor obsessed with his body, so much so
that he strips whenever the opportunity arises, much to the consternation of
Vanya, a homosexual for whom the closet-door is only half-way open. Spike is of
the species that used to be called a lounge lizard, and Raines plays the role
so well that you can almost imagine seeing some scales on his back. In true lizard
fashion, he speaks with forked tongue with regards to Masha, who, in the final
moments of the play, dumps him and sends him packing.
Then
there’s Gay, the prophetess Cassandra. Her role is a bit constrained, since she
has one primary characteristic: her ability to foresee the future, but she
deftly switches from Greek oracle to her other role as cleaning lady, including
a marked change in body language. Her best moments are in the second act when,
with the help of a voodoo doll and a pin, she tries to punish Masha for
contemplating selling the house.
Finally, there’s Fritsch and Peck,
who work together seamlessly as two siblings who have come to adjust to each
other’s quirks and needs. You truly believe that they have been together
forever. In the second act, each character has her or his moment to shine.
First, there’s Peck, who receives a phone call from a man whom she met at the
previous night’s party who found her “charming” and wishes to take her out to
dinner. Of course, we only hear one side of the conversation, so it falls on
Peck to make us understand what is being said to her, which she does with great
aplomb while conveying her character’s ambivalence about going out on a date.
Her exit after this soliloquy received a well-deserved round of applause, for
it was softly yet compellingly mesmerizing.
Fritsch, as Vanya, must assume many
roles as he tries to live with Sonia and arbitrate the arguments and lessen the
occasional near-psychotic hysteria of the two women. He also has his moment in
the spotlight near the end of act two. Nina has agreed to perform his play (she
plays a molecule set free after the destruction of Earth) for the rest of the
family and Spike. As might be expected, the play is a bit inane, which allows
Spike to open his cell phone and start texting. Vanya sees this and it triggers
a four- or five-minute diatribe about what has changed in our society. For an
audience of a certain age (the opening night audience would certainly qualify,
as do I), Vanya’s rant takes us down Memory Lane to a time when people wrote
letters and licked stamps, watched “The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet” and
kids, mostly boys, wore coonskin hats in emulation of Davy Crockett and were
transfixed by the pubescent sexual allure of Annette Funicello on the Mickey
Mouse Club. The specific references might be lost on younger generations, but
Vanya’s sense of loss and feelings that he is now a stranger in a strange land
are palpable and can be understood by anyone regardless of age, and Fritsch
delivers this diatribe with a rising sense of loss and remorse for the
irretrievable.
Yes, in the end, the siblings are
united, but you sense that the bickering will never stop – it’s in their blood.
The last we see of them they are arranged in family-photograph order with the
Beatles’ “Here Comes the Sun” playing in the background and the blue heron
(compliments of projection designer Philip Lamb) returning to the pond. Is this
a happy ending? Well, if you know your Chekhov, you suspect not.
“Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike” runs
through August 3. For tickets or more information go to www.theatreworks.us or
call 860-350-6863.
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