Sunday, October 10, 2010

Sarah Ruhl month in Indianapolis

Clearly Sarah Ruhl, the playwright for all three, is a popular woman in Indy this month. She won a MacArthur Fellowship, but having such a prominent presence in our city is surely the greater honor.

And how are the plays? Glad you asked.

Butler's performance of Eurydice was poignant and beautiful. The spartan stage was, if anything, more evocative than an elaborate set would have been, and the student actors were quite capable. The Stone chorus provided exposition where necessary and comic relief that was sorely needed for such a dark, moving story. The father/daughter relationship was heart-wrenching.

The Phoenix has done their usual masterful work on In the Next Room. It's hard to single out any particular performances, because everyone who took the stage did so with élan, but Michael Shelton and Lauren Briggeman are the heart and soul of the story, and each conveys a complex mixture of strength and vulnerability. Briggeman in particular grabs the audience and takes us with her on her roller-coaster ride of emotions; her evocative facial expressions are evidently finely honed.

Angela Plank has shone in several recent plays for the Phoenix, and her performance here does not disappoint. She plays a difficult, understated role with grace.

Dwandra Nicole similarly has a restrained role through most of the play, but her monologue near the end leaves no doubt as to her acting skills.

Scot Greenwell doesn't appear until the second half of the show, but acts as the catalyst for Nicole's speech and compels Shelton and Briggeman to confront the problems with their marriage. His is a rich performance with no false notes.

In the Next Room runs for two more weeks; despite its unorthodox subject matter that will undoubtedly turn off some who read its subtitle (you'll have to find that out for yourself), it is as close to a must-see performance as you're likely to find in central Indiana.

At least until the next Phoenix production.

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