During
the first act of In The Event of My Death,
I had a feeling that I am reading somebody else’s Facebook feed and I am
increasingly losing interest in it. Now the grown up high school friends and
acquaintances are assembling for an informal mourning of their friend Freddy,
who committed suicide. We newer see Freddy and never get a chance to sympathies
with him - the situation is as awkward as being at the funeral of somebody you
didn’t know.
Photo by Katy Atwell
Unfortunately none of the former schoolmates, written by Lindsay Joy,
are particularly interesting. Peter (John Racioppo) lives in his parents’ house,
works for his dad, and is considered a loser by his friends. Amber (Lisa Jill
Anderson) is a chubby misfit seeking confidence in drugs. Becky (Samantha
Strelitz) is a prom queen, who used to treat everybody badly and now is hated
by the group, except for Peter because they are dating now. Trevor is a gay
guy. Conner works in advertising in New York.
Direction
of Padraic Lillis often gets trapped in stereotypes as well. Scenic design, by
Irma Brainard, featured a boring living room with highly organized, and
therefore artificial, looking mess in the beginning. The set had a nice
addition, a porch, where the action took place sometimes. Movement in the
living room was frozen for the duration of the porch scenes, which was an
interesting director’s choice but didn’t quite land. With flat
jokes, clichéd sentiments and endless gossip about two-dimensional people who
you don’t care about, I barely made it through the first act.
The
intermission was presented like a TV commercial with act one ending on a sudden
appearance of two sisters and the girlfriend (Breanna Foister) of Freddy,
interrupting the gang’s wild dancing. Act two picked up from the same moment
and finally the show got some fresh air. As we learn more about Freddy’s older
sister Meg (Lillith Fallon) and his twin sister Kate (Kara Young), the
complicated family dynamics makes the show much more interesting.
In The Event of My Death runs through
August 21st at IRT Theater (154 Christopher Street,
third floor) with performances Wednesday through Friday at 7pm, Saturday at 3pm
& 7pm, Sunday at 3pm, and Monday at 7pm. Tickets ($18; $20 at the door) are available online at
www.stablecablelabco.org or by calling Brown Paper Tickets 1-800-838-3006.
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