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TIP Gives Give It Up, Turn It Loose by
Raleigh’s Kim Moore the World Premiere Treatment
by
Alan R. Hall
August 2, 2008, Raleigh, NC: Theatre
in the Park is presenting the world premiere of a play by Raleigh playwright
Kim Moore entitled Give It Up, Turn It Loose,
a loosely-knit series of seven monologues that explore the relationships
that lie at the heart of its cast of characters. The play, despite
its format, does have a lead character who appears twice as often
as any of the others do. These seven monologues, or scenes, are
knit together, in this production, by a silent “Assistant” character
(Seth Blum), rather like the Stage Manager in Thornton Wilder’s Our
Town. The Assistant chooses the cast; gives them their scripts;
and facilitates the action by providing sound, props, and lights
as they are needed. Blum leads a cast that combines well-known
faces with newcomers, and together they give this play a very fine
treatment, indeed.
Once he has “selected” the cast, our Assistant introduces
the first character, Veronica (Rebecca Blum), to the audience.
She wears a red kimono deftly decorated with a gold dragon. Veronica
speaks with a German accent; but quickly intimates that it is fake,
that she is a gal from Jersey, and that this gorgeous kimono she
loves so dearly is from Wal-Mart. She speaks to Daniel, who is
absent. Adam Twiss, the show’s director, intimates that every
character is having a conversation with someone unseen; and that
the other side of the conversation is what we as listeners must
glean. But the “dialogue” doesn’t come across
that way. If the missing respondent does speak, it is very rarely.
In one scene, the respondent is a bird!
Scene two is where we first meet Sheila (Debbie Tullos Strange),
a brash young woman who is laden (and that is the operative word
here) with a six-year-old daughter. Daughter Jane is right there
in the scene; but of course we don’t see her. The Assistant
ably provides action but no actual words. It seems Mama, for that
is how Jane refers to her, has caught Jane begging for money from
the customers of this Laundromat in which they interact. In the
upbraiding Sheila gives Jane, it becomes evident that not only
is Sheila tired of playing mommie to this brat — she never wanted
to have this child in the first place.
The rest of the play consists of what seem to be longer and longer
scenes. First comes Billy (Samuel Whisnant), a Super-Jock in his
senior year of college who has only one friend, Jack, to whom Billy
gives a slideshow presentation to get him to straighten up. Next
is Daniel (Byron Jennings), who speaks to his ex-roomie while trying
to make a breakfast omelet, something he never has successfully
completed. He has set up a kitchen in the basement, using the workbench
as a tabletop and the tool pegboard for his gadgets.
Following Daniel is Reagan (Emily Gardenshire), a 17 year old
who is moving out of the apartment she has shared with her dad.
She’s moving in with Billy, which we all know is a big mistake.
She’s the one who converses with a bird. Finally, is Cutler
(Shawn Smith), a professor who has been incarcerated for “unspeakable” crimes.
He speaks to his mother, another terrible mommie who cannot seem
to let him go, despite his fall from grace. Finally, Sheila, 12
years older but no wiser, comes back to describe her separation
from her daughter, Jane, now 18 and off at college.
Each of the characters in these scenes is only partially filled
out by playwright Kim Moore, which makes the cast work that much
harder in this TIP production. The cast is well up to the task,
and each performer gives his character every ounce of reality that
can be mustered. It doesn’t help. This play is a series of
scenes, each one titled and separately staged; they are linked
only by a one-line reference within the monologue. The scenes do
not really relate to one another. They are not all performed by
the same actor, which gives Sex, Drugs, Rock & Roll by
Eric Bogosian its notoriety; nor are all of the scenes set in one
place or even one area, such as Charles Aidman’s stage adaptation
of Spoon River Anthology by Edgar Lee Masters.
These seven separate scenes seem to have only one thing in common,
and that is that all seven characters are on a downward slope from
which none of them will recover. So, the dramatic thread, such
as it is, is not really a supportive link between the characters,
but rather a downspout through which all will tumble. It is not
much of a link, and it makes these seven scenes very disjointed
and seemingly unrelated, which makes the play little more than
seven people inhabiting the same stage, and not even together.
Because Give It Up, Turn It loose was workshopped by
Raleigh’s Burning Coal Theatre Company in 2005, one would
have believed it would have come out of workshop in better shape
than it is. As it now stands, especially without Twiss’ addition
of The Assistant, this is just seven workshop scenes. That link
of unseen conversation, as well as the tenuous thread of mutual
acquaintance, needs clarification. We need to know not only why
the play’s characters are here but, more importantly, why
we are here. Otherwise, the audience will let go of this play long
before the play lets go of them.
Theatre in the Park presents Give
It Up, Turn It Loose Thursday-Friday, Aug. 7-8, at 8 p.m.;
Saturday, Aug. 9, at 3 and 8 p.m.; Sunday, Aug. 10, at 3 p.m.;
in the Ira David Wood III Pullen Park Theatre, 107 Pullen Rd.,
Raleigh, North Carolina 27607. $21 ($13 students and active-duty
military personnel and $15 seniors 60+). 919/831-6058 or etix
through the presenter's site. Theatre
in the Park: http://www.theatreinthepark.com/
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