Burton Leavitt Theatre
Pieces
Burton Leavitt Theatre
Windham Theatre Guild
779 Main St
Willimantic, CT
March 6-7, 2020
The collection of six plays is called Pieces because
each play is part of a larger script that the playwright is working on. This is
the second year of the Windham Theater Guild’s “Playwrights Showcase.”
The works range from absurdist comedy to serious
investigations of social issues.
The Guild has consistently offered quality productions of
new work, older established plays and now, we have the chance to see lesser
known playwrights who are perfecting their chops.
The Funny Affair by J. Mason
Beiter is a great way to start the evening. He is a clown. She is leaving him
for another man. She says that among his many great qualities, the other man,
“has great hands.” He is a mime. The clown, and the mime, face off in a fight
to the…death?
I was fortunate enough to see
this short play done at another venue as a cold reading, but this production
put it on its feet and brought it to life. Beiter has a strong sense of what
makes a production work: clearly differentiated characters, opportunity for physical
movement that reinforces the spoken word, and a linguistically satisfying text that
pulls the audience on with forward momentum.
With: Harry Gagne, Olivia
Kurnyk, Jake Buckley
Curse You, Matt Damon by Jill
Zarcone brings us two elderly sisters who grow pot in their basement. This
wouldn’t be so dangerous except that one of them is having an affair with a
South Boston policeman. The other one is
jealous.
Playwright Zarcone has a
wonderful sense of the absurd and a great sense of timing. Although she writes
with authority she shows us a kind of hesitance and unsureness in her
characters that is very playable by actors.
With: Michele Abbazia, Jim York,
Kody Mileski, and by special arrangement, Sharon Soderbergh.
Playing by the Rules by Peter
DeNegre. In the script the athlete wants the tutor to help him put the paper
he bought on-line into his own words. The frat house is never seen from the
inside but various characters enter and exit through the window and the door.
Mixed signals, frat rape of the
young tutor Francis, and boozy seduction of women are par for the course in
this comedy that makes us stop and think about what we accept as funny.
With: Alex Gentile, Raven
Dillon, Dan Reynolds, and Rachel Lewis.
Kindling by Rebecca Steigelfest is
the most poetic of the pieces offered in this evening of one acts. It
also seemed to be the most personal-confessional. If I have the quote right Steigelfest says “My throat is sore with words I haven’t
spoken.”
Kindling portrays the
character (and maybe the writer) as struggling to overcome a violent betrayal
that threatens her ability to go forward with life. But she says, “I won’t burn
out, I’ll burn through.”
Performed
as a monologue by the author.
The Waiting Room by Scotty Duval
brings together Mozart and several people from the 21st Century. They are
caught at the limen between this life and “The undiscovered country from whose
bourn no traveler returns.”
The group of recently deceased
souls meets in between life and the afterlife, unable to let go of life due to
regrets and unfulfilled dreams. We see shades of Sartre’s No Exit (Huis
Clos).
Whose fault is it that they died,
committed suicide, had a fatal accident. Does responsibility end with our life
on earth, or does it continue in the afterlife? Can we do anything to fix it,
after the fact? These are some of the questions that come to mind as we watch the
longest of the plays offered this evening. It has 3 scenes, the second scene is
played in the middle aisle of the theatre and is very powerful monologue that
ties the first two together.
With: Jacob Wurst, Joshua Stern,
Jay Barbeau, Natalie Pavone, Carly Oliver, Julianna Cargo, and Scotty Duval.
Jorts by Julianna Cargo is a
fashion-forward fashion-disaster. Cargo (the playwright not the pants) tells us
that fashion is a way of showing who you are without speaking. But in doing so
she gives us a blizzard of comedic dialogue.
Words are a kind of clothing. Writing
for performance, like understanding retail, is not as easy as it seems. Cargo
manages both with a sense of style.
With: Zoë Hayn, Allison
Sawtelle, Jake Lachinet, Joe Martin, and Kody Mileski.
The Windham Theatre Guild is to be commended for their
commitment to developing new talent. The “WTG Playwrights” is a group that will
bring increased audience and admiration to the whole Windham Theatre Guild organization.