Photo by STRATTON MCCRADY |
The
Book Club Play
By
Karen Zacarias
Through
October 13
Review
by Lawrence Kessenich
If
you like your humor broad and a little silly, this production of The Book
Club Play at Boston Playwrights Theatre will please you. I doubt you’ll be
in danger of falling out of your seat with laughter, but you’ll get some good
chuckles.
The
setting is a middle class living room (beautifully designed by Jeffrey Petersen)
where the eponymous book group of 30-somethings has been meeting for five
years. The group includes newspaper columnist Ana, who claims to have founded
the group; her college friend (and brief beau at the time) Will, a history
museum curator who continually reminds Ana that the book group was his idea;
Ana’s husband and Will’s former college roommate Rob, a reluctant member of the
group who rarely reads the books (he says he’s in it for the food), Ana’s
somewhat forlorn single friend Jennifer; and the newest member of the group,
Ana’s protégé at the newspaper, Lily.
Adding
interest—and making everyone totally self-conscious—is the fact that everything
that happens in the groups for a couple months is being filmed by an unmanned
camera and the footage will be used by an internationally famous filmmaker for
a documentary about book groups. Many times in the play, members of the group
address the camera directly, usually asking the filmmaker to cut the part that
has just been recorded.
This
is a very literary book club—when the play opens, they’re discussing Moby
Dick—but a somewhat clumsy exchange with Lily, who is black, reveals that
the group has only read white authors. They ask Lily to pick something intense
and out of their wheelhouse, clearly hoping it will be a classic author of
color, but Lily picks the popular novel Twilight, written by a white
woman. Ana and Will are aghast, but the others are willing to give it a try, so
they decide to read the book.
Much
of the humor for the middle part of the play grows out of the discrepancy
between Ana and Will’s classical tastes and everyone else’s appreciation of Twilight
and then The Da Vinci Code, which is introduced by a man Jennifer
springs on the group. The man, Alex, is a professor of comparative literature,
but, having recently been dumped by his girlfriend because she read Twilight,
he has come to realize that he knows nothing about popular literature and ought
to be learning about it.
There
is a good deal of back and forth between the opposing groups about the value of
popular literature, and though some of it is interesting, and even insightful,
it isn’t terribly dramatic and goes on a bit too lolng. What provides some
drama is Rob’s dissatisfaction with his marriage to Ana, Will’s coming to grips
with his sexuality, and Ana’s dealing with her slipping control over the group.
It would be spoiling things to describe what happens in these areas, but
suffice it to say that there are a number of revelations that cause confusion
and consternation in the group.
Interspersed
with the book club scenes are brief monologues by a single actor, Brooks
Reeves, who appears upstage, with the set dark behind him, as an amazing
variety of characters, including: a female literary agent, who talks about how
many books there are and how few get published and read; a male Secret Service
agent, who talks about his own book group and how they enforce attendance;
“Sam” from Walmart, who talks about how many books the company sells and how
intra-Walmart book clubs keep its underpaid employees happy; and an elderly,
retired librarian, about to skydive, who warns readers to live life for real,
not just through books. While these interludes are sometimes fun, they really
don’t relate to the rest of play in any direct way—except at the very end, when
the Secret Service agent makes a brief appearance with the rest of the
characters.
Besides
Reeves, because of the variety of his characters, none of the actors really
stands out. They are good performers, but I never really believed in them as
real human beings, because the director, Shana Gozansky, has them play their
roles on a kind of middle ground, neither realistically nor over-the-top
(except for brief moments). If they’d been over-the-top most of the time, the
farcical quality would have carried the humor better. But I think it would have
been even more effective if they’d been asked to play their characters as
naturally as possible, which would have set off the absurdity of what goes on
among them. So, this reviewer was left feeling lukewarm about the play, caught
on his own middle ground between liking and not liking the play. Depending on
your tastes, you might go either way.
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