ADAPTED
by Lawrence Kessenich from Short story by Doug Holder
Staged Reading Presented by the Playwright's Platform
Reviewed by Playwright, Mary M. McCullough
Staged Reading Presented by the Playwright's Platform
Reviewed by Playwright, Mary M. McCullough
The Patient, a play adapted by Lawrence Kessenich from a short story
by Doug Holder, has three characters. LEON, a mental health
generalist, as he refers to himself, sleeps days in his boarding
house room. He is getting a graduate degree in American Literature,
while working nights in a mental hospital. His work entails sitting
by the bedside of a drugged and bound PATIENT. Other than speaking
directly to the audience, his only interactions are with the patient
and an overly friendly NURSE who attempts to engage Leon in her
social life, outside the hospital. The play raises questions about
sanity. When the patient wakes to confront Leon, the patient’s
questions and analysis of Leon life threatens Leon’s fragile sense
of himself. Leon tells him to go back to sleep but who is really
asleep? The patient is more alive and more rational than Leon,
asserting that Leon can choose to live differently. He also tells
Leon that his boarding house room is a “suicide suite.” Leon, in
a beautifully written, poetic monologue, early in the play, confirms
he is “dreaming of remote possibilities that are actual dead ends.”
Is Leon a suicide candidate? The play leaves one thinking that Leon
and the patient are opposite sides of the same coin; and that the
coin is about to be flipped. The play is well written and very
intriguing.
Mary McCullough is a founder of the http://www.streetfeetwomen.org, and an accomplished playwright, performer and writer. |
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