Monday, May 12, 2014

On the Verge -- Great Actors, Uneven Production

New Rep’s production of On the Verge is usual and avant-garde.  It contains some sparkling, witty moments, and several neat performance elements, and some laugh-out-loud funny lines. Unfortunately, much of the good work of the performers and production staff is undermined by the fact that it’s just not a very good play. On the whole, the production ends up feeling lacking in cohesion and overly long.

We were interested in the idea for this show because of a fascination with intrepid Victorian lady travelers. They were remarkable women who somehow escaped the extreme strictures that society placed on them. They didn’t just escape from the suburbs to a condo downtown; they fled to the Congo, to Morocco, to live with Bedouins in the desert or with Buddhist monks in the Himalayas.  (Apparently their money bought some protection and European dress and manners made them seem so exotic as to be untouchable.) They may have been naïve, but they had real intellectual curiosity. And they were not silly people.

The play, to its credit, does capture a sense of wild eccentricity and exuberance. But there’s not really a plot to speak of, except for somewhat erratic and unexplained time travel, which ends, for no real reason, in 1955.  And the direction doesn’t help. The three women are quite different in character. One is a scientist, one a poet and dreamer, and the third a rather conventional soul on journalistic assignment from a tabloid. But these differences in character are blurred by similarity of dress and manner so that the women seem much the same (and thus, not as interesting as they should be) until late in the second act.

Of the four actors – all of them familiar to New Rep patrons and Boston audiences in general as superb performers – only Benjamin Evett escapes being bogged down in the sometimes-ponderous wordplay which plagues the three women. The pace picks up whenever he enters, whether as a cannibal who becomes the person he eats, a yeti, a bebop gas station attendant, a lounge singer, one woman’s left-behind husband (or his ghost) or a nebulous character called Mr. Coffee by a confused traveler.     
  
As the women travel, seemingly via some sort of transparent Mary Poppins-like parasol, they develop the ability to see into the future. Much of the comedy revolves around words and phrases which pop into their consciousness, words that are part of our everyday vocabulary but which would mean nothing to a Victorian – air mail, rock and roll, Mr. Coffee, Burma-Shave, casino. Most of the “osmosing” of the future, however, is light and funny.  We were confused and rather disturbed by the absence of any sense of the darkness in the times ahead of these women. Mustard gas is mentioned in passing, but any Cassandra peering into the twentieth century would have to have to spend some effort to avoid seeing the sickening destruction of World War I and the even worse events of the Holocaust and Hiroshima.

Sad to say this production was just not up to New Rep’s admirable high standard. The play, sets and costumes and direction all seemed curiously intellectually sloppy. I particularly wish Christine Hamel, Adrianne Krstansky and Paula Langton better luck in future New Rep productions. They are all fine actors and did their best with a difficult and sometimes-dragging text.

~ Johanna Ettin & Shauna Shames, New Rep Reviewers


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