Review: Next Fall (AstonRep Theatre)

By Chicagotheaterbeat @chitheaterbeat

  
  
Next Fall 

Written by Geoffrey Nauffts  
Directed by Derek Bertelsen
at Heartland Studio, 7016 N. Glenwood (map)
thru May 25  |  tickets: $20   |  more info
  
Check for half-price tickets 
  
  
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Sincere attempt at a thoughtful play falls short

     

  

AstonRep Theatre Company presents

  

Next Fall

Review by John Olson

This play opened in New York off-Broadway in the summer of 2009 and, with the help of no less than Sir Elton John and his partner David Furnish, transferred to Broadway the following spring. There, it was critically well-received and became one of the four Tony Award nominees for Best Play. Indeed, it’s a heartfelt play with the worthy theme – little explored in dramatic literature – of a gay person’s internal conflict between their orientation and their firmly held religious beliefs that homosexuality is a sin. It’s a problematic play, though. Some of the characters’ motivations are unclear or illogical, although this may have been less of a problem in the hands of more experienced actors than this production possesses. Geoffrey Nauffts script requires convincing naturalistic acting to put the story across and to flesh out characters which he has admirably written to avoid easy stereotypes. This cast, for the most part, isn’t quite up to that challenge.

In Next Fall, the struggling and late thirty-ish writer Adam meets the younger Luke, an aspiring actor from Tallahassee, Florida who is deeply religious and is not out to his parents. Luke, fearful that his fundamentalist father Butch will cut him off from contact with his younger brother, keeps his orientation and his relationship with Adam secret from the family. This continues for the five years of their relationship until an auto accident puts Luke into a coma. The off-stage accident opens the play, and the action alternates between flashbacks of Luke and Adam’s relationship over those five years and scenes at the hospital where Luke lies comatose. The flashbacks include religious discussions of salvation and redemption, the revelation that Luke prays after sex with Adam (apparently to repent for the sin of such sex). There’s also an awkward visit by Luke’s father to the apartment Luke and Adam share before Luke’s efforts at de-gaying their abode are quite finished. Though Luke is out to all other significant people in his life, there’s an increasing tension in the relationship from Luke’s refusal to come out to his family and to introduce Adam to them. The hospital scenes bring Adam together with Luke’s parents in the waiting room and into a situation where the price of Luke’s secrecy regarding Adam is made horrifyingly clear. Adam has no standing in the eyes of Luke’s parents. No right, or to their understanding, no reason to be involved in the life or death decisions regarding Luke that will follow. It’s an even more fundamental question than that of gay marriage. Though same-sex marriage is now legal in New York, it’s pretty clear that Luke would not be so “out” as to enter into marriage, and he would keep it hidden from his parents if he did.

Nauffts draws Adam and Luke well enough as everyday recognizable urban gay men, mostly avoiding the sorts of stereotypical references that writers often fall back upon. Ryan Hamlin as Adam has the largest role and is the most convincing of the cast, giving him a Will Truman-like sensibility and self-deprecating sense of humor and insecurity. Mark Jacob Chaitin is energetic and upbeat as the younger Luke, though he plays him with a slight effeminacy that would be enough to arouse suspicion of a gay orientation among all but the most self-delusional parents.

It’s with the secondary characters that Nauffts, director Derek Bertelsen and this cast have more trouble. While Nauffts should be lauded for refraining from stereotype in creating Butch, he replaces these clichés with a bundle of contradictions. Butch and his first wife Arlene, Luke’s mom, were once wild free-spirits. Butch is now married to a second wife and born again. That’s fair enough, but does it seem logical Butch would have acquired new prejudices with his new faith? And, it’s revealed Butch in the past had worked with a gay art dealer and thus had had at least some exposure to gay people on a personal level. The sort of unyielding bigotry Butch is shown to have doesn’t seem logical. Is it perhaps internal homophobia? Possible, but Nauffts doesn’t make that suggestion. As Butch, Jim Morley, understandably given the script, doesn’t seem to quite know what to do with his character. It’s not clear exactly how kind or cruel Butch is meant to be. Luke’s mother Arlene is shown to have taken longer to settle down, and her portrayal here by Lona Livingston is frequently entertaining. But, does it make sense that Luke would have kept his orientation secret from his mother who most likely would have been more accepting of it? It’s shown that Arlene has had little contact with the family, so there’s no reason to fear the word would get from her to Butch. Nauffts leaves these questions unanswered and Livingston does little to fill in those blanks by providing a different and clearer reaction to the news of Luke’s orientation.

The remaining characters are the friends Holly – described in one scene as fat, though the actress (Aja Wiltshire) is not – and the taciturn Brandon. Holly has little function in the play and risks being, through no fault of Wiltshire’s, a stereotypical gay gal pal. Brandon (Curtis Jackson) is simply enigmatic until he is shown to have his own brand of religion-based internal homophobia late in the play. There’s really very little for Jackson to do with his character.

In general, Bertelsen’s cast has a hard time making Naufft’s naturalistic script feel organic. They’re mostly unable to develop varied cadences that distinguish between lines meant to be mundane and tossed off versus those that convey important information. They don’t add information beyond what Nauffts has given them on the page and further define their characters through physicality or vocal inflexion. This seems to be the hardest part of acting, particularly with such a realistic script and intimate staging. The ability to move beyond simply providing logical readings of the playwright’s lines, using them as only a starting point for creating characters, is what most distinguishes professionals from non-professionals. In this regard, this cast is below most of the professional non-Equity companies I’ve seen in this city.

Most of the play’s action occurs either in the hospital waiting room or the couple’s apartment. Jeremiah Barr’s unit set does double duty as both and it’s initially confusing where we are at times. Barr and Robert Tobin have also created some ambitious video projections of Luke and Adam on the streets of Manhattan that are unnecessary and hard to read on the curtain that was awkwardly pulled across the stage between scenes. Allison Smith’s costumes are appropriate of the characters, though they included an odd pair of maroon slacks for Adam.

There’s no questioning the sincerity and commitment of this company to a piece that, despite the distracting confusions in its secondary characters, is an intelligent examination of some of the unique challenges gay men and lesbians face in fully integrating all their relationships. You may want to see it for that reason, and by later in the run, it’s possible the cast may have fallen more deeply into their characters.

  

Rating: ★★

  

  

Next Fall continues through May 25th at Heartland Studio, 7016 N. Glenwood (map), with performances Thursdays-Saturdays at 8pm, Sundays 2pm.  Tickets are $20, and are available by phone (773-828-9129) or online through BrownPaperTickets.com (check for half-price tickets at Goldstar.com). More information at AstonRep.com.  (Running time: 2 hours 20 minutes, includes an intermission)

Photos by Jeremiah Barr


     

artists

cast

Mark Jacob Chaitin (Luke), Ryan Hamlin (Adam), Curtis Jackson (Brandon), Lona Livingston (Arlene), Jim Morley (Butch), Aja Wiltshire (Holly).

behind the scenes

Derek Bertelsen (director), Jeremiah Barr (producing director, scenic design, projection design, photos), Samantha Barr (lighting design, stage manager), Alexandra Bennett (dramaturg), Amanda Lautermilch (assistant director), Danielle Moore (assistant stage manager), Allison Smith (costume design), Lisa Tobin (props, graphic design, house and box management), Robert Tobin (artistic director, projection design).

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