A
guy walks into a bar and sees a girl. This sounds like the beginning of joke or
the start of a Saturday night. This is also the beginning of Half Moon Bay, produced by Lesser
America, currently playing in the Studio of Cherry Lane Theater. This play,
written by Dan Moyer, charmingly flirts and teases with you right from the
start, much like Annie (Keilly McQuail) and Gabe (Gabriel King) flirt with each
other at the bar of the bowling alley.
photo courtesy of Spin Cycle
The
awkwardness of non-funny jokes, the silliness, and the bravery rising from the increasing
level of alcohol endears both of the characters to the audience immediately. They
share a couple of drinks, and in a couple of days, they share a night of
drinking more, talking, dancing and making love.
The
very light and down to earth writing by Moyer makes you chuckle at times and
laugh out loud at others. Much like the characters themselves, the play shies
away after bringing up a serious topic and a joke immediately follows. But
hidden beneath the jokes and goofing around are two wounded souls trying to
connect and find support in each other.
There
is a strong magnetic bond between Keilly McQuail and Gabriel King, to which the
audience gets drawn immediately. Guided by the director Jess Chayes, those two achieve
an incredible synergy like a couple of dancers who can intuitively feel the
movement of the other before it’s even made. There are a few actual dance
scenes in the play that are hilarious.
I
would argue that almost all the movement on stage is reminiscent of a dance in the
sense that actors never settle in their positions at any given time even, if
they are just sitting at the bar. When one of the final scenes is unwinding,
Gabe and Annie stand in the middle of the room opposite each other and talk
without changing positions for a while, we can still see the compressed energy
in McQuail’s rounded shoulders and tense fingers.
The
ease of Gabe’s movements and the constant charged state of Annie probably has
something to do with the fact that the characters are drunk or hung-over throughout
the play. It is carried to the audience and you start feeling slightly buzzed
yourself.
Half Moon Bay is full of poetry, which
comes at you out of nowhere, and numbs your legs for a bit. Fresh, sexy and
funny, some of these lines are still rolling in my head like a hard candy.
“What did you think of me when you first saw me?” asks Annie. “I want to take a
wet bathing suite off this girl, one piece, slowly peal it down”.
The
cinematic lighting design by Mike Inwood is as simple as it is beautiful. The
blue and purple coloring of the bar in the second scene (scenic design by Reid
Thompson) highlights the atmosphere already set by lights of the juke box and
neon signs.
Half Moon Bay can be seen (and highly
recommended to!) in Cherry Lane theater at 38 Commerce Street, New Yourk, NY.
Tickets and information here: http://www.cherrylanetheatre.org/onstage/half-moon-bay/
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