As I looked around the L-shaped seating arrangement
at the Ensemble Studio Theatre, allowing me to see audience members across the
space, I realized mine weren’t the only sleepy eyes watching Maggie Bofill’s lugubrious new comedy, WINNERS. Unlike my response to the similarly titled WINNERS AND
LOSERS, at the Soho Rep, I’m afraid I’ll have to ring the loser’s bell on this
outing about a dysfunctional suburban family struggling to make it through the
recent recession.
Grant Shaud, Scott Sowers. Photo: Gerry Goodstein. |
When Brian goes to the Gap to complain about his son’s being fired, the boss, Bill (Scott Sowers), who used to work with Brian before they both lost their jobs, hires him to replace Tommy, which only angers the boy more. That’s because Tommy saw Bill taking sexual advantage of another 16-year-old worker at the store, a girl named Mandy, on whom Tommy has a crush.
The two hour and 25-minute play (there’s one
intermission) rambles along, detailing the edgy, sexually frozen, relationship
between Brian and Mabel; Tommy’s various anxieties; and Mabel’s attempts to get
a scholarship to a better school for Gabby. The latter means having to convince
Lilly (Polly Lee), Bill’s wife, head of the committee, to favor Gabby. All
comes to a head at the Mackeys’ dinner party thrown for Bill and Lilly at which
Gabby and Tommy present a bizarre Christmas play Gabby’s been writing as a
school project; it which uses the kids’ grievances as thematic metaphors. This
leads to serious accusations, a visit to the police station, and, in a wacky
final tableau that is more pathetic than moving, familial forgiveness.
Now what did I leave out? Oh, yes. The family has
two animals, Buck, a dog, and Marie Antoinette. Perhaps because she felt the
plot elements limned above weren’t sufficient, Ms. Bofill has made the pets
into characters played by humans (Curran Connor as Buck and Stephanie Hsu as
Marie), who wear human clothes (vaguely hinting at canine or feline qualities)
and speak to one another in English but bark or meow when people are around.
Their animal naughtiness (he roots around in the garbage can, she pees on her
mistress’s pillow) is intended for comic purposes, but the whimsy wears off rapidly
and you soon begin wishing you had a rolled up newspaper nearby.
From left (at rear): Florencia Lozano, Grant Shaud; (in bed) Stephanie Hsu, Arielle Goldman, David Gelles, Curran Connor. Photo: Gerry Goodstein. |
There’s nothing here you haven’t seen in one sitcom
or another. WINNERS may be called a comedy, but, for all its comical (even
farcical) moments, the tone is more frequently like soap opera, with so
much screaming you wonder if the actors’ vocal cords will make it through the run. Pamela
Berlin’s direction does little to make anyone believable, her blocking is sometimes awkward, and the pacing too often is funereal. For all its plot
complications, the piece seems merely to be running in place,
accumulating business but taking forever to reach its goal. If I were looking
for places to cut, I’d begin with those un-cute, overworked animals. PETA, where are you when we need you?
WINNERS, whose set is by Jason Simms, takes place in
multiple locations, including various rooms in the Mackeys’ house, but also at
the Gap, at Lilly’s office, and in a car. When the play opens we’re in the
kitchen, with a cooking island in the center, backed by a realistic wall with
French doors, a door to elsewhere in the house, and a hallway. There’s also a
TV screen built into the upstage wall with the image of a microwave on it. But when
the scene changes, a small army of time-consuming, rhythm-breaking, although very efficient stagehands
enters to remove the furnishings (some slide into the upstage wall), while a few new props or furnishings are brought on. The walls,
the hallway, the TV screen, and the doors remain, although the screen image is
different. What was realistic in the first scene morphs into a mishmash
of locales all using the same background. What’s needed here is a conceptual
design—perhaps using projections—that abandons realism and
employs simple abstractions to represent the different places, with the
stagehands eliminated and the cast alone (they're currently integrated with the stagehands) choreographed to bring on all necessary
furnishings.
From left: Grant Shaud, Polly Lee, Arielle Goldman, Scott Sowers, Florencia Lozano, David Gelles. Photo: Gerry Goodstein. |