Cloud 9
Written by Caryl Churchill
Directed by Maureen Payne-Hahner
at Gift Theatre, 4802 N. Milwaukee (map)
thru Dec 4 | tickets: $22-$32 | more info
Check for half-price tickets
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It’s not all bliss in Gift Theatre’s thoughtful production
The Gift Theatre presents
Cloud 9
Review by Dan Jakes
“You can’t separate fucking and economics,” says one of the women in Caryl Churchill‘s 1979 comedy. Start making more money than your spouse, and things could suddenly change in the bedroom. Tiptoe outside gender normativity, and you risk getting stripped of your proverbial pants in other relationships. There are few constants and even fewer rules that survive societal shifts, suggests Churchill, be it in a hyper-structured Victorian home or (supposedly) liberated late-20th century London. At the crux of it, in any era, there’s going to be some geopolitical implications to cunnilingus.
If Cloud 9 dates itself a bit with easily dismissible-stereotype commentary in the first act, it only serves to deepen the impact of the second, which centers on versions of the same characters set in the post-sexual revolution 1970′s. Freed (sort of) from male domination, Churchill’s characters grapple with new power and sexual complications that have no easy culprit to point a finger at. Liberation comes as a mixed blessing: a gay couple struggles to find a consensus on monogamy, another couple negotiates business and family, and a mother (Alexandra Main, delivering a touching monolog about letting go of inhibitions) realizes that a woman doesn’t need a partner to enjoy her own body. This competent and well-paced Cloud 9 is ambiguous where it should be, never reaching beyond the grasp of what can be said about relationships, and emphatic where it counts.
Rating: ★★★½
Cloud 9 continues through December 4th at Gift Theatre, 4802 N. Milwaukee (map), with performances Thursdays-Saturdays at 7:30pm. Tickets are $22-$23, and are available by phone (773-283-7071) or through Gift Theatre’s website. (check for half-price tickets at Goldstar.com). More information at TheGiftTheatre.org. (Funning time: 2 hours 30-minutes, which includes one intermission)
All photos by Hillary Clemens and Amelia Scott
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