The ArtsCenter is currently offering up Ten
by Ten in the Triangle, its sixth annual festival
of 10-minute plays, billed as “10 plays, 10 actors, 10
minutes, 10 bucks.” It is still a bargain at twice the
price; but even though these 10 shows have been hand-selected
by a panel of first-class judges from over 400 entries, the
final 10 do not seem to have the dual punch of brevity and
content that prior years’ runs have had. Please do not
misunderstand; this is a well-turned and truly entertaining
evening. But apparently these playwrights could not present
the stand-up-and-take-notice boom that just last year’s
array carried.
Last year, the explosions went off one right after another. This
year is billed as “The Year of Breaking Things,” such
as laws, taboos, myths, etc; but the plays do not break things
so much as they do simply adjust a few things: perspective, predictability,
pacifism, to name a few. We still got the power of a few fine playwrights
in this year’s top 10, but some of these plays were a touch
below the gold standard we have come to expect from the previous
five years.
The very first play presented fell into this latter category.
In “Self-Help,” by Andrew Hinderaker of Chicago, Woman
(Donnis Collins) meets Man (Estes Tarver) on what she thinks is
a blind date. Trouble is, both of these poor waifs are a touch
lacking in the self-esteem department, and are in “programs” to
help them cope. They discover that their attraction — and
there is indeed attraction — comes from their common predicament.
But the writing here is a bit too long on the gnashing of teeth
and self-deprecation, and a bit short on the “possibilities” side
of the fence. By the time they bring themselves around, we’re
okay with it; but we’re still wondering where the boom went.
We next meet “Cosmo and Gigi,” two street
women created by Isabella Russell-Ides and played by Barbette Hunter
and Sarah Wright, as they begin their day on their favorite park
bench. We gather that the two snipe at each other due to the old
saw about familiarity; but Gigi brings Cosmo around with a brand-new
item she has claimed: a Red Sweater. Hunter and Wright capture
well the seeming in-and-out-of-focus grasp on reality that street
people, as a whole, exhibit; but the overall theme, which we may
state as “If you want to mend fences, share something special,” falls
a touch flat.
“Cell Mates,” written by Molly Tinsley
of Ashland, Oregon, gives us a man and a woman (Cory Kraftchick
and Danielle Koppel) alone in a room. They each remain in their
respective cubicles, but these two telemarketers maintain touch
through — what
else — their cell phones. This is preferable to him, because
he just can’t deal; but she wants more out of the relationship
and so, much to his dismay, she makes a more physical appearance.
Kraftchick captures the neurosis of our guy well, but Koppel makes
this one work, with a sweet but cajoling character that gets her
fellah on board, so to speak.
As the one to bring us up short, “Bluff” works pretty
well, but only because the shift from bad to worse really is a
shocker. Father (LaMark Wright) confronts daughter (Collins), who
has come over to his house in her bathrobe and PJ’s in the
middle of the night, when she is supposed to be living at her aunt’s
house, since the death of her mom. What ensues is a fairly commonplace
argument between the man who has given up and his spitfire daughter,
about when are you going to get off your can and start living again.
The catalyst to disaster is the gun, which Dad whipped out at the
sound of her intrusion. He says he can’t cope and doesn’t
want to live; she gives back “tough love,” hands him
the pistol and tells him to go ahead and end it all, it’s
better than going on like this. Does he call her bluff? Only the
viewer can say.
The first set closes with a terrific comedy about four old pals
who have convened for a night of poker. “Helluva Poker Face,” by
Christopher Lockheardt, gives us only one hand, but it becomes
the be-all and end-all of the evening’s game. Cam (Greg Hohn)
raises all he has on the table in the face of what looks like a
slam-dunk for his opponent (Kraftchick). But the other two split
down the middle: one (Tarver) says “You gotta call” because
the only hand Cam can have that will actually win is a million-to-one
shot; the other, Mr. Psychology (Rick Lonon), says Cam has to have
it or there is no way he would bet it all. Cam’s
character says not a word this entire show, but he does have one
helluva poker face. We have to take this one, for both comedy and
characterization, as the best of the five we see in Act I.
Act II gives us bookends of plays about theater. The first, “Friendship
101” by Chris Shaw Swanson (who wrote last year’s “The
List”), shows us a playwright (Sarah Wright), her Muse (Collins),
and two characters, Woman 1 (Hunter) and Woman 2 (Ginny Linden),
engaging in trying to create a play about friendship between women.
Trouble is, our Muse wants Drama, and our playwright wants Substance.
It’s a winner-take-all battle….
“Oh Happy Day” by Rich Orloff, in his fourth year
at Ten by Ten in the Triangle, tells a terrific tale about
the eighth anniversary of a marriage. Hubby (Tarver) comes home
to Homemaker (Wright), after one long day of dealing with The Huns,
the members of the U.S. Congress. The two gay men share beer and
the day’s events, but this chat is terrifically like just
another comfortable old married couple. We find genuinely real
characters and amazingly familiar family life in this play, even
though each, in his own way, is beating his head against the wall,
trying to get the outside world to recognize them for who they
are. Terrific acting brings this play to seismic proportions with
simple but heartfelt emotion.
There are parts of “Back Roads,” by
Stephanie Walker of L.A., which remind us of “Bluff” in
Act I. Mom (Linden) lost Dad only three months ago. Her daughter
(Koppel), who has been driving up until a moment ago — of
gas — now searches frantically for her cell
phone, which is, conveniently or inconveniently as you may choose,
missing. The duo spars verbally as the younger tries to flag down
a passing car, without success. It isn’t until Mom remembers
that her daughter lost her husband, but had kids to take care of
that brought her through, that she remembers that she has one she
needs to take care of, too.
“Merrily, Merrily,” written by Kelly Younger, presents
us a seemingly unsolvable problem. They’ve only been married
three years, but Howard (Lonon) lovingly presented Janet (Hunter)
with a membership to Curves, and she thought he was telling
her she was fat. To even the score, she lost 36 pounds. Now, she
wants adventure (this time in the form of whitewater rafting) and
he longs for his easy chair. Is it time for this unmatched match
to split? Can his little blue pill save the day? This one is comic
and well acted, but the end is pretty trite.
To close the evening — as is their wont — The
ArtsCenter saves what is arguably the best for last. “Scripted” is
penned by Mark Levine (in his fifth year of Ten by Ten).
The other of the theatrical bookends, this work opens as the alarm
clock goes off in just another couple’s bedroom. The real
alarm for Elaine (Koppel) comes when Simon (Hohn) finds a script
by the clock, and they realize it is a script for their coming
day. It proves so because everything she says — even in the
face of this new conundrum — already appears on the page.
They fear disaster, but take their fate in their hands and read
it. It’s just another day. Is that good or bad? And can they
change the written word? It turns out that there’s a pink
rewrite sheet enclosed….
Of the 10 shows presented, this reviewer narrows
the candidates for Best of the Evening to three. I personally can
relate to “Helluva Poker Face”; I’ve sat at that
table. But the next two vie for top honors. I’m not all that
sure that I can definitively say which should take home the Blue
Ribbon. I’m particularly partial to “Oh Happy Day,” because
of these two fantastically drawn characters; but for a single whoppingly
fantastic idea for a one-act play, “Scripted” seems
the better choice. I’m going to stick my neck out and stay
with “Oh Happy Day.” If you can get writing this good
paired with two fine actors like these, you’ve got one “helluva” statement
to make.
The ArtsCenter presents Ten
by Ten in the Triangle Thursday-Saturday,
July 19-21, at 8 p.m. and Sunday, July 22, at 3 p.m. at 300-G
E. Main St., Carrboro, North Carolina. $10. 919/929-2787 or via
etix at the presenter's site. Note: There
will be chance to share a glass of wine with the playwrights,
cast, crew, after the July 21st performance. The
ArtsCenter: http://www.artscenterlive.org/index.php?a=Theatre&b=Current%20Productions&id=174.