Tuesday, November 25, 2025

STERLING CAST SHINES IN BACKYARD RENAISSANCE “THE WAVERLY GALLERY”

 “The Waverly Gallery” by Kenneth Lonergan, is one of those heart wrenching , bittersweet  comedy/dramas that when done well, will leave you exhausted, on the verge of tears or more, and drained. So, it is with the production at the Backyard Renaissance  Company on 10th Ave Downtown under the deft direction of artistic director Francis Gercke and an ensemble hard to beat. 


Katie MacNichol and Deborah Gilmour Smyth

Billed as  semi -autobiographical, what happens in Gladys Green’s (Deborah Gilmour Smyth) family can and is happening in families across the nation. She…………is suffering from Alzheimer’s disease, although you wouldn’t know it when we first meet her in her Greenwich Village art gallery. Her family struggles to keep some sort of balance in their lives while coping with the possibility of their mother/grandmother going down that slippery slope toward dementia. Her daughter and son-in law live on the  Upper West Side of Manhattan where she has dinner with them every Wed. night.

Deborah Gilmour Smyth as Gladys

What stands out most is the credibility and humanity of each and every cast member as they come to grips with their emotional highs and lows. Tom Zohar is Daniel Reed, Gladys’s grandson. As the playwright’s alter ego he breaks through the fourth wall and tells us about Gladys and then slips right back into his role as Daniel. 

Alexander Ameen, Katie MacNichol, Tom Zohar and Deborah Gilmour Smyth

Alexander Ameen and Katie MacNichol (who goes through a range of emotions from helplessness to impatience, anger, devotion and acceptance) are her son in law and daughter Howard and Ellen Fine, and William Huffaker is Don Bowman, a quirky artist from Mass.(with his broad R’s intact) whom Gladys allows to use her space to show his art along with offering him a place to sleep in a cot in the back of the gallery much to the chagrin of her family. 

William Huffaker and Deborah Gilmour Smyth

Both MacNichol and Ameen are perfect as they go through the stages of recognizing what will happen to their family as the burden of Gladys’s illness weighs in the balance. Will she/ won’t she have to eventually have to live with them when she reaches a point of not being able to live on her own? 


But the focus is, after all on Gladys, and Ms. Smyth has never been as amazingly on target as she is with Gladys. In all the years I’ve followed her career, she has the ability to transform herself into her character. 

Deborah Gilmour Smyth and Tom Zohar

With Gladys, she embodies this woman and that’s what makes it so gut wrenching and real. Like her family, you want to remember her as a vibrant and active, no nonsense woman, (who has a law degree) feisty and fun loving who loved to entertain and throw big dinner parties, but now her absent mind gets in the way and memories of her in the now, take over.




Tom Zohar (in background) William Huffaker and Alexander Ameen

These are questions addressing so many families across the nation; the what ifs. 


On the technical side, Duane McGregor’s  and John Zamora set design makes good use of the 10th Avenue space separating it into three functioning areas; a dining room, gallery and sitting room. Logan Kirkendall sound design, (using church bells to mark time is most significant and deafening but necessary.) 

Curtis Mueller’s lighting effectively  separates the three playing areas and Jessica John Gerck's costumes put the finishing touches to an already very finished show. 


Cast

Don’t miss this timely play. 


It plays through Nov. 22nd.


See you at the theatre

Enjoy!!



When: Previews begin Nov. 13. Opens Nov. 22 and runs through Dec. 6. 7:30 p.m. Thursdays through Saturdays; 3 p.m. Sundays

Where: Backyard Renaissance Theatre at the Tenth Avenue Arts Center, 930 Tenth Ave., downtown

Photo: Michael Makie

Tickets: $15-$50

Phone: 760-975-7189

Online: backyardrenaissance.com



 

No comments:

Post a Comment