Speak, forgive, forget. It’s one of the guiding principles of the Pennsylvania Amish community depicted in Chelsea Marcantel’s Pulitzer-nominated Everything Is Wonderful, staged in a stirring if stilted production at Keegan Theatre.
As with many such moral doctrines, the phrase rolls off the tongue easily, but it’s not always so easy to stick to those principles when being sorely tested. The family at the heart of the play is tested to painful extremes, and speak-forgive-forget, and even their deep-rooted faith, might not be enough to keep their bonds intact.
Tragedy has intruded on the peaceful, pious lives of farmer Jacob (Michael McGovern), wife Esther (Susan Marie Rhea), and their daughters Ruth (Sasha Rosenbaum) and Miri (Leah Packer), all grieving a devastating loss. Worse, their mourning is complicated by emotional fallout caused by a separate, also devastating event.
The family’s full story — also involving community neighbor Abram (Ben Clark), and an outsider, Eric (Max Johnson), living in the family’s barn — emerges in layers peeled back slowly, in a non-linear fashion.
Director Josh Sticklin also designed the expressive set, which, like the patchwork of plots and subplots, assembles a complete picture from detailed, though jagged fragments. The family kitchen, their barn, and farmland fill the stage, backed by a screen for projections of gorgeous sunrises and clouded vistas by lighting designer Hailey LaRoe. The tableau of lighting and scenery, dressed to a T — and despite the clunky farm-noises sound design — make vivid the isolated beauty of their surroundings.
The fragmented narrative doesn’t fit together with such satisfying sureness. Sticklin and his cast don’t give us enough to stay oriented in the constant shifts between past and present, employing hints too faint for us to discern how much each respective character knows or doesn’t know based on the chronology of when secrets are revealed. More confounding than intriguing, the play loses traction.
Credit where it’s due, Clark, as neighbor farm boy Abram, registers a clear through-line for his character in accordance with the time-hopping narrative. Dutiful Abram also reveals a streak of entitlement that Clark makes appropriately off-putting, while also really compelling, especially opposite Packer’s proud Miri.
Packer’s portrayal generally tends towards mannered highs and lows, but captures the gravity of what weighs on the character’s heart and conscience. Miri and Ruth have grown up with Abram, who now claims the former as his betrothed, and his insistence on marriage arises as another trial in the family’s sorrow-stricken lives.
Johnson’s too-jittery visitor Eric arrives as one more trouble on their doorstep, in the play’s most contrived development of many in the compounding conflicts on the family’s table.
The strain of it all builds towards several explosive exchanges, with Rhea’s stern-faced Esther and Clark’s forceful Abram dealing out particularly fervent tongue-lashings on separate occasions. By contrast, a warmly credible McGovern portrays family leader Jacob as the soul of serenity.
A devoted man of God, Jacob counsels Miri on the value of submission and surrender as a path to healing. As it happens, submission can ease the way forward in some situations, but not every time, as Miri learns with heartrending certainty through this bumpy exploration of forgiveness, community, and true generosity of spirit.
Everything Is Wonderful (★★☆☆☆)runs through Oct. 5, at The Keegan Theatre, 1742 Church St. NW. Tickets are $55, with discounts available for students, seniors 62+, and patrons under 25. Visit www.keegantheatre.com.
We are not the same baseball-adoring America we were in 1955, the year the Tony-winning Damn Yankees hit Broadway. Most notably, as it pertains to the musical created by George Abbott and Douglass Wallop, with music and lyrics by Richard Adler and Jerry Ross, "America's pastime" doesn't occupy nearly the same space in the nation's hearts or cultural consciousness as it did then.
Today, if Adler and Ross were writing a number like "Six Months Out of Every Year" -- in which wives lament losing their baseball-obsessed hubbies' attention completely to the game from May to October -- it would have to be about football to reflect where America's obsessions currently lie.
Estranged cousins Mina (Renea S. Brown) and Sade (Hillary Jones) in a.k. payne's intimate drama Furlough's Paradise could hardly be more different in taste and temperament, but they still share more in common than just blood.
Despite wildly differing living circumstances, both women risk hoping for their version of a better future. They both harbor dreams that feel so big they have to keep them closely guarded, and both are haunted by choices they made that led them down uncertain paths.
Mina and Sade once shared a childhood, a sisterhood and friendship, bonds that frayed as their lives arced in seemingly opposite directions. Mina, the bright Ivy League grad, now lives in L.A. on a plump Google salary. Sade, of whom far less was expected, resides in a cell inside a West Virginia state prison.
Lizzie Borden swings a mean axe in Lizzie the Musical, both as a rage-fueled maybe murderess and as the electrifying voice leading this hard-charging, concert-style rock musical. For director-choreographer Jennifer J. Hopkins' bracing new production at the Keegan, Lizzie's voice -- and her rage and riveting determination -- reside in Caroline Graham.
Lacing Lizzie's fury with a winking sense of humor, Graham positively shreds the grunge-punk rock score composed by Steven Cheslik-DeMeyer and Alan Stevens Hewitt, with lyrics by Cheslik-DeMeyer and Tim Maner. Maner wrote the show's book, which hews close to the known facts and testimony that have shaped public perception of the notorious 1892 murder case.
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