46. IT’S
JUST SEX
When
Jeff Gould’s IT’S JUST SEX begins, the scene is just what you might expect from
a play with such a title. Phil (Matt Walton), a handsome man in his briefs
and a rumpled shirt and tie, and Amanda (Molly Fahey), a brunette hooker in
lingerie who could be straight from a Victoria’s Secret catalogue, are carrying
on hot and heavy; Amanda is on the couch with her legs signaling V for victory
and Phil’s head is zeroing in on its target when Joan (Jackie Debatin), Phil’s beautiful
blonde wife, walks in on them. That, however, is one of the very few suggestions
of onstage sex in this woefully unfunny play that has transferred to New York
from Los Angeles, where it was purportedly a hit. Maybe LA has a different vibe
when it comes to this kind of banality, but the best thing I can say about IT’S
JUST SEX is that, while it shares the same stage at the Actors Temple Theatre
with CUFF ME: THE FIFTY SHADES OF GREY UNAUTHORIZED MUSICAL PARODY!, it’s not
nearly as bad. Oy vey!
Let me clear one thing up right
away. Despite the title’s promise of naughty farce in the vein of NO SEX
PLEASE, WE’RE BRITISH, which seems a classic by comparison, IT’S JUST SEX is
actually a mildly serious attempt at a comedy-drama about marital sexual
relations. If it didn’t have three couples, instead of two, you might consider
it a very distant relative of, believe it or not, WHO’S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA
WOOLF? Of course, that probably wasn’t playwright Gould’s intention, but when
you have a couple in a strained conjugal relationship hosting a cocktail party
for two similarly troubled couples and the evening slowly devolves into a
wife-swapping situation and its inevitable aftermath of regret, recrimination,
and reconciliation, it’s hard not to remember VIRGINIA WOOLF’s invocations to
“Hump the Hostess.”
On the plus side, the cast is
attractive, all of the women especially so. And they're not untalented; just not used well. And that, more or less, is the plus side.
As for the rest, we have direction (by Rick Shaw) that seems to be
afraid to do more than 30 in a 65 miles an hour zone; characters whose unexceptional personas
are essentially interchangeable—apart from Lisa (Gina LaPiana), a mildly spicy
Puerto Rican dish in a sizzling red dress; low-energy acting that needs someone
to stick a pin into it; writing that would not get past the pilot stage if this
were the sit-com it often resembles; and a shadow sequence showing the offstage
couples having sex that any high school theatre program could do better. The
dialogue is filled with puerile banalities and tired double entendres, like Phil’s
suggestion that he might as well remove the first three letters from “welcome”
on the front doormat, or his crack about sleeping with a hooker being “glorified
masturbation.” There also are several awkward scenes, as when the elegant Joan
attempts to perform fellatio on her reluctant husband despite the presence of
their ill at ease friends.
As noted, Gould has created a
situation in which, as a result of a night of spouse-swapping, each couple is
placed in a position where, sparked by a game of “Tell the Truth,” they are
forced to confront their particular marital problems. The issues are familiar
and not without import, but their treatment is clichéd and unimaginative. To
his credit, Gould tries to balance the serious implications of the various conflicts
with humor, and comes closest when one of the men, Greg (Michael Colby Jones, in the show's best performance), who has been having impotence problems,
declares that his wife, Lisa (Elaine Hendrix), is always undercutting his
manhood. Greg is challenged to name one example, so he whips out his smart phone, where
he’s recorded every instance, and recites a litany of her put downs, something I wouldn’t be surprised many in the audience wish they’d thought
of themselves.
The biggest problem with IT’S JUST
SEX is that it isn’t.