An explosion of tropical passion in a
Manhattan pet store, brought to you by a cast of both abled-bodies actors and artists with
disabilities
Anita Hollander, Alyssa H. Chase, David Harrell, Rob Minutoli & Anthony Michael Lopez in The Artificial Jungle.
Photo by Carol Rosegg
If
you can imagine a play that is an homage to The
Postman Always Rings Twice in the first act, and a parody of Thérèse Raquin in the second, all of
it generously peppered with Mel Brooks’ camp, you can get a taste of The Artificial Jungle. Produced by
Theater Breaking Through Barriers, a show celebrates a 50th anniversary of The
Ridiculous Theatrical Company, established by Charles Ludlam, the author of The Artificial Jungle. Everett Quinton, who played Zachary in the
original 1986 production, directs the ensemble of abled-bodies actors and
artists with disabilities, keeping in line with the mission of the Theater
Breaking Through Barriers.
Roxanne (Alyssa H. Chase) and
Chester (David Harrell) have been married for some time and are running a pet
store in the lower East side, together with Mother Nurdiger (Anita Hollander),
Chester’s mother. From the perspective of the overly enthusiastic man-child
Chester, it seems like 1975, the year he got married, was just yesterday. He
can’t stop jumping excitedly around his wife giving her “suction cup” kisses. From
the way Roxanne cringes from disgust and whips her cheek annoyed,
it seems like at least a decade had passed since the couple got together and
Roxanne is just eager to get the burden of their marriage off her shoulders.
The opportunity presents itself when a drifter,
Zachary Slade (Anthony Michael Lopez), responds to a help wanted add posted in
the pet store window, shamelessly faking his knowledge in fauna. So here we
have: a promiscuous wife, a deluded husband, an affectionate mother, a naïve
family friend – police officer Frankie Spinelli (Rob Minutoli) - and a newly
acquired store assistant, as they are torn between moral choice and engulfing
passion.
Oh, and there are also piranhas. I was
surprised to not discover them on the list of characters. Operated by Satoshi
Haga, the piranhas don’t merely swim back and forth in a giant tank like your
average fish. The school watches TV, vividly reacts to the interactions of
humans, and ultimately plays an important part in their “soup-operetta”. To
avoid spoilers, lets just say, that piranhas are completely free of morality.
The
comedy progressively escalates to a farce as it nears the ending. Alyssa H. Chase,
playing a seductive vixen, carries a huge part of it with her grotesque,
melodramatic performance. She moves like some exotic bird, resembling Lilli
Taylor in Arizona Dream. Her passion
born of boredom quickly finds an opening for a long nurtured
fantasy to run away from her husband, but also acquire the family business and
to become the crowned queen of her jungle.
The set design by Bert Scott and costumes by Courtney
Butt blow the topic of tropics to a ridiculous scale. The walls in the
store/apartment are painted with lianas; even the sheets on the bed and
costumes of the storeowners in the beginning have jungle flora patterns on
them. The agony of color and tacky taste receives a second breath, powered by
the flashes of light parodying thriller and horror films.
__________
The Artificial Jungle runs at Theatre Row's
Clurman Theatre, 410 West 42nd Street,
through June 25th. The running time is two hours with one intermission.
Performances are Tuesday - Wednesday
at 7pm,
Thursday - Friday at 8pm, Saturday at 3pm & 8pm, and Sunday at 3pm. Tickets are $52.25, available at 212-239-6200 or visit www.telecharge.com. For additional information, visit www.tbtb.org.
The Artificial Jungle is written by
Charles Ludlam. It
is directed by Everett Quinton, produced
by Theater Breaking Through Barriers.
The
production team includes Bert Scott (Set and Lighting
design), Courtney Butt (Costume Design), Julian Evans (Sound Design), Charles
Bowden (Props Design), Vandy Wood (Puppet Designer), Satoshi Haga
(Puppetmaster/Fight Captain), Andre Sguerra (Production Manager), and Steve
Asher (General Manager).
The cast is Alyssa H. Chase, David Harrell, Anita
Hollander, Anthony Michael Lopez and Rob Minutoli.
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