As
the audience enters they see the most boring set ever: a living room with a
couch square in the middle, and half empty plates and wineglasses on the table
in front of it. But don’t let it trick you as Crude is unlike any other living room drama we’ve seen in a long
time. It inherited recurring genre attributes like a stale interior design with
the necessary whiskey in a carafe for actors to occupy themselves on stage
during long dialogues. But wait for it…
As
Jaime (Nico Tortorella) and Brittany (Eliza Huberth), a young married couple,
were going through their first scene I didn’t quite know what to make of it.
They are watching a commercial created by Jaimie for Kurtz Petroleum, a company owned by Jaimie’s father. The young
corporate wolf is overly excited and proud. He demands the reaction from his
wife who, as will be established shortly, is an environmental activist. There
also will be an old sick dog, which is like a child to them.
As the scene moves on, the invisible TV still runs
and distracts the characters. When Brittany talks to Jaimie she glances at the
direction of the audience from time to time, which looks like a really bad
theater but is in fact a genius idea. This shows a separation between the
couple with their different views on the relationship, family, money and
environment, which will become the core of the drama. Despite their seemingly
normal and balanced dialogue, despite them kissing passionately, the crack is
already there and the approaching environmental catastrophe will put them at
risk of falling apart.
I just love the small details in this play so
cleverly written by Jordan Jaffe. When the old dog pooped, interrupting a love
scene, and Jaime went to clean it up, Brittany saw the news about even bigger
shit coming their way; namely a huge oil-spill near the coast. Both of them
rush to the door to clean up on their end. But with the seemingly single goal,
to contribute in cleaning the ocean, they have different priorities. Jaime is
tied with his father’s company and his dream of becoming rich and influential
through the oil business. Brittany wants to be a good and supportive wife but
she works at the environment protection organization and seems to be very
genuine about her beliefs.
The remainder of the play Jaime spends on drugs, smoking,
sniffing and putting drugs up their butt, while brainstorming with his sidekick,
Aaron (W. Tre Davis), and idea for a new commercial, which is supposed to save
the reputation of Kurtz Petroleum in the public’s eyes. Aaron’s drug dealer,
Manny (Jose Joaquin Perez), gets to be in the story in a couple of scenes but the
show is mostly about Jaime at this point and we get to see how Nico
Tortorella gains momentum of awesomeness as the play progresses.
Tortorella’s
intense, raw performance is captivating and irresistible. His “choreography”
transforms a dull and tight set into a world of its own by demonstrating at least
50 different ways of sitting on a couch. He endears audience members to the
rough text of Jaffe’s play and makes you love the ugly side of his character.
There
is something of a “movie” quality to Tortorella’s performance in scenes with
Davis, where the audience doesn’t exist for the actor and he gets to be by
himself and to just play off his scene partner. Yet that magical vibe of the
organic existence on stage faded out in scenes with Huberth. This might sound
like a description of the absence of “chemistry” but to me is a sign of a great
actor’s intuition.
The
theatrical element is prevalent in the way the couple interacts, the example of
it being the exercise that they do where they need to name three reasons why
they appreciate each other. Despite Jaime being a modern young man, and not
prude at all, he has surprisingly strong patriarchal views of women over which
he constantly fights with Brittany. The seemingly conventional set design by
Caite Havner suddenly looks quite bold in this context and emphasizes his
conservative nature.
With
a good amount of things that somebody might consider low brow and in bad taste,
(like scratching the crotch and saying the word “fuck” 30 times in two minutes),
Crude is full of self irony and
little delicious nuances. Where else on stage will you see a classy whiskey carafe
and a bag of dog poop.
This
is not a theatrical production to which you would take your grandmother. The
good part is that all the salty humor is backed up with fresh and somewhat
unconventional performances, inventive director’s work and a disturbing drama
of the modern generation. So your grandmother might appreciate it just fine,
though your 14-year-old niece wouldn’t be allowed in the theater.
Crude is running Monday to Saturday at 8pm
through May 21st in Theater 511 at Ars Nova (511 W 54th street, New York, NY).
Tickets and more information here: http://www.crudetheplay.com/
I'm glad you enjoyed it. I don't think male lead's performance is bad at all, but once the quality of a play disagrees with me too much, I just kind of give up. I really like your unique angles to review theater. By the way, I'm not sure if oil spill would be a spoiler for people who haven't seen it. You should also check out how to be eligible to be a judge for certain off bway award shows, which will give you a full year's press tix for off bway shows
ReplyDeleteThank you, Kendall, I will check it out!
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