“Next Fall” by Geoffrey Naufft's now currently playing at
OnStage Playhouse through March 25th is a poignant, contemporary laced
with irony and humor play about being gay. It’s about believing and not believing. It’s about friendship and
family, geography and history and past and present. It has it all except
solutions.
Tony Bejarano and Rob Conway |
Luke (Rob Conway) and Adam (Tony Bejarano) are lovers. They
have been for the past five years. Luke is deeply religious, and wears it on
his sleeve. We know this because he gives thanks before he eats and after sex.
(He knows that sex with Adam is a sin.)
But more importantly, he does not question the dogma of his
childhood teachings and is at peace with himself regarding his evangelical
Christian beliefs around life and death (“When the time comes… I welcome it”).
He knows Adam is a non-believer. “I never had that in my life, so how do I know
for sure…everything’s gonna be all right”?
But they have bigger problems than Adam’s non-religion,
religion. Luke’s parents don’t know he is gay. He has yet to come out,
explaining to Adam that ‘next fall’ when his younger brother goes off to
college he will deal.
So far, he has been able to manage the gay issue. His mother
Arlene (Susan Bray) and Dad, Butch (James Tarbert) live in Florida and have
been separated for years. He is pretty much on his own and ‘safe’ in New
York.
Luke works in a candle shop that is owned by Adam’s best
friend, Holly (Kira Vine). He aspires to
be an actor. Adam is a substitute teacher, and wannabe writer. He is older and
somewhat of a hypochondriac, which is where most of the humor comes in.
Adam and Luke have their differences and may or may not have
worked them out. We will never know because of the tragedy that will bring all these
good folks together; Luke is struck by a cab and is in a coma on life support.
The story weaves back and fourth, (Bruce Wild designed the
flexible set and Susan Stratton and Bruce Wilde designed the projections) past
to present and back again giving us snippets of how they met, what their life
looks and looked like to some degree, and how they came to be the men they are
today.
When we meet the entire family they are in the waiting area
of an ICU at a Jewish Hospital in Manhattan. (This play has it all, Jewish,
Agnostic and Fundamentalist Christian). Luke’s Mother Arlene (Susan Bray is
wonderfully over the top as the discombobulated recovering addict whom we later
learn has fallen off the wagon) is in a constant state of dissaray. She does it well.
When Holly mentions to Arlene that they sell tchotchkes and things
in the candle shop, Arlene wants to know if it’s a Jewish thing like bagels. Thankfully,
when push comes to shove, she finally has the spine to face the reality of her
son’s sexuality. In fact both parents do in their own time.
His irritated and narrow-minded father Butch is also present in the hospital waiting room, but prior, Butch paid a visit to his son's New York apartment and if he didn't see the clues regarding his sexuality its only because he didn't want to.
Both parents have just arrived from Florida. Butch is furious to learn that the
cab driver has no insurance or green card! Butch paces and challenges everyone.
James Tarbert and Kira Vine |
I suspect he knows more than he lets on just by the attitude
he has toward Adam throughout the play. Tarbert’s actions and reactions are
homophobic appropriate. He doesn’t endear himself to anyone although I did feel a twinge of sympathy for him at some point. “Who let’s these
jackasses across the border, that’s what I want to know”. “I’ll sue the whole
damn city if I have to”. And so on.
Long time friend Brandon (Chris Tenney), a bible studying
property developer and friend Holly are already at the hospital when the play opens. I understand Holly’s
involvement in Luke’s life; she is after all his friend and boss. She came into
his life by way of Adam, who used to work for her as well.
But the character of Brandon is like a hanging chad and is
never really fully explained. One has to
wonder why the playwright needed his character. I never understood it.
Kira Vine's Holly is credible as more of a reality check and neutralizer for everyone. Her
timing is spot on every time she’s in a scene; it lends credence.
Susan Stratton directs “Next Fall” with an eye focused more
on the lighter side of playwright Nauffts’ a la Neil Simon style one-liners
while the real issues are sidelined. It’s frustrating to watch Adam, who is not
allowed to see Luke when he finally arrives at the hospital after coming home
from a high school reunion.
Bejarano’s Adam huffs and puffs, frowns, raises his brows and
tugs at his sweater but never puts his foot down to confronting Arlene and
Butch. After a while it becomes old hat and fails to convince.
Butch has notified the hospital personnel that ‘only family’
can go in Luke’s room. Why Adam just doesn’t tell Butch what he already knows
and put him out of his misery is a mystery. Throughout the play Tarbert’s
Butch, a larger than life presence grows into the part.
Conway’s Luke is much younger, and eager to please, yet fully
committed to his views and teachings. The contrasts in their life styles
reflect their differences in just about everything they do and believe. Talk about opposites
attracting, this is a classic case.
The relationship between the two, regardless of their
disagreement, works and is believable thanks to Conway, a real cutie with
enough charm to win this reviewer over. Throughout we keep on rooting for Luke
to recover and for Adam to have time to spend with his lover.
It deserves to be seen if for nothing else but to understand
the corruption and hypocrisy that takes place within the religious community (churches/synagogues)
when the gay community is condemned and vilified. When marriage equality is
shot down it affects the whole community. Thankfully just now some of the churches and synagogues have become gay friendly. It's about time.
When parents refuse to see their offspring as they are and
when children and or young adults do not feel safe sharing with their own
parents their sexual preference and when young people feel the need to kill
themselves because they are different, attention must be paid!
“Next Fall” opened off –Broadway in 2009. In 2010 Drama Desk
Awards nominated it for Outstanding Play. It was also nominated for a Tony as
Best Play. Sadly, some things never change or they seem to regress and crawl
back into their mythical shells.
Today the gay community is more at risk of having their civil and human rights taken from them than in the past. All the gains made
before Trump and Pence are in jeopardy and that is in itself is scary.
As a relatively new comer to OnStage productions, I find it
rewarding that the board is willing to mount controversial and more importantly current and oft times politically challenging topics, and do it wholeheartedly.
Congratulations.
See you at the theatre.
Dates: Through March 25th
Organization: OnStage Playhouse
Phone: 619.422.7787
Production Type: Comedy/Drama
Where: 291 Third Avenue, Chula Vista, CA 91912
Ticket Prices: $20.00
Web: onstageplayhouse.org
Photo: OnStage Playhouse
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