Wednesday, January 22, 2014

207. Review of CRAVING FOR TRAVEL (January 19, 2014)


207. CRAVING FOR TRAVEL

 
It’s increasingly likely that in the age of Travelocity, Orbitz, Expedia, and the like, the average person planning a trip will avoid calling or visiting a travel agent directly and book their own flights, cruises, hotels, and excursions. Travel agents still abound, of course, but they struggle for an edge in a business that has gone so thoroughly digital. Nor are they likely to enjoy the kinds of classily appointed offices assigned to the two rival agents in CRAVING FOR TRAVEL, the moderately funny but terrifically performed new farce by Greg Edwards and Andy Samberg at the Peter Jay Sharp Theatre. These folks aren’t your ordinary storefront agents, however, with one desk crowded behind the other and stacked with brochures and other agency paraphernalia. They’re luxury agents, a niche that, according to Jim Strong, one of the leaders of the industry, is booming because of the high-class personal attention lavished on today’s growing ranks of deep-pocketed travelers. Mr. Strong commissioned and produced the play, so I suspect there’s a passel of truth hidden under its comically exaggerated premises and heightened theatricality.

 
Michelle Ragusa. Photo: Joan Marcus.

            Set designer Charlie Corcoran has split the stage into two attractive offices in different buildings for Joanne and Gary, former spouses, who are competing with each other for the industry’s Globel (not a spelling error but a pun!) Prize as travel agent of the year. Thom Sesma plays Gary and Michelle Ragusa (recently of DISASTER!) is Joanne, but they also play around 30 other characters, mainly their wide variety of clients. The piece is a tour de force opportunity for its resourceful stars, who do a remarkably effective job of altering their voices and, Mr. Sesma especially, facial and bodily expressions, to instantly capture whoever they are portraying. Since the same characters reappear frequently, it’s something of a feat for the actors, without any costume or makeup changes, to immediately take on the speech and physical mannerisms of their characters, old and young, male and female, and to do so in such distinct ways that the audience is never in doubt as to who’s talking. The actors’ versatility and energy is memorable, but, while there are some funny highlights, the humor isn’t consistent or abundant enough to regularly break the laugh barrier,
 
 
Thom Sesma. Photo: Joan Marcus.

            Except for a few minutes at the end when Joanne and Gary share the same icebound space (as the result of a losing bet), the conversations are entirely on the telephone, cell and landline, with Joanne and Gary talking both to each other and to their clients in rapid-fire conversations broken up into bits and pieces as the phone calls keep coming in. The 85-minute, intermissionless play operates something like an extended sketch on “Saturday Night Live,” but very cleverly manages to weave together all the apparently unrelated phone calls into what turns out to be a surprisingly well-integrated plot. At first we listen in on the calls as Gary and Joanne wrestle with the demanding problems posed by their eccentric clients’ next to impossible requests, but as the problems keep mounting they each find ways of using one client to help another, until they pull off some rather world-class feats of travel agent legerdemain.

            Among the many clients is the super-wealthy Wolf Davenport, who wants to take the U.S.S. Intrepid for a spin around Manhattan; Cliff, a handsome, sophisticated, jet-setting humanitarian on whom Joanne has a crush; an elderly couple who want to travel to celebrate their 60th anniversary party at Rick’s American Café in Casablanca, which they think is a real place; a stereotypical, bigoted Southern senator with influence in the Defense Department who’s having trouble getting into a hotel; a Lithuanian representative trying to get American tourists to her country; a Reggae-singing Jamaican selling a scuba diving excursion; and an American trapped in China in one crisis after another but whom Joanne refuses to help because he booked his trip with Travelocity.  Used for comic fodder are the Kardashians, Florida, Keebler cookie family, the Nieman-Marcus family, a quadriplegic agent, a crooked Russian seeking to book a trip to Aspen for which he says he'll make his own passports and visas, Patti Lupone (Ms. Ragusa nails her), a family seeking a suite at a hotel on Maui when they’re booked through the roof, an Arab sheik, Atlantic Airlines (a phone announcement says, “Due to your feedback, all of our planes now have seatbelts”), a honeymooner fed up with her husband’s incessant cuddling, and so on. Somehow or other these threads come together in a unified comic fabric, even though some loose ends are left hanging.  

            Co-author Sandberg’s direction keeps the pace lively, the jokes spinning, the atmosphere bright, and the performances focused. Too much of the material remains cute and mildly amusing, more suitable for the smile-meter than the laugh-meter, but undemanding playgoers might wish to book passage aboard this show. Bon voyage.