Laura Woodward and Brunch Reed. Photo: Lanny Nagler
By Lauren Yarger
Relationships at start and finish, love at first and last sight drive the newest work from playwright John Cariani, Love/Sick at TheaterWorks.
Director Amy Saltz, who helmed last season's award winning production of Cariani'sAlmost Maine at TheaterWorks, assembles a talented cast of four (Pascale Armand, Bruch Reed, Chris Thorn and Laura Woodward) to play 20 characters in ten sketches about love at its best and not-so-best set at "7:30 pm on different Friday evenings, Spring through Winter in an alternate suburban reality." Make sure you catch that "alternate reality" part, because unless you are willing to let go of reality, and give Cariani some room to create some "sick" characters and situations, you won't enjoy a lot of the humor. The playwright makes this clear with the first sketch, "Obsessive Impulsive," where a Man and a Woman (Reed and Woodward) run into each other at the Super Center and immediately start making out. They try to stop themselves, but as they apologize and try to explain (in exact unison), we discover they suffer from Obsessive Impulsive Disorder, which makes it difficult for them to keep from acting upon impulses. Have they fallen in love at first sight or are they just unable to control a physical attraction? It's funny, but bizarre. Thorn stands out in the next sketch "The Singing Telegram," when, on his first day on the job, reluctantly delivers a singing missive that doesn't contain a message its recipient, (Armand), is expecting. He's embarrassed, awkward and deeply sensitive. The actors continue opening windows into moments of relationships with the help of quick-change costumes designed by Harry Nadal and simple sets (designed by Michael Schweikardt) and props (managed by Sven Henry Nelson). The vignettes include
Added depths of humor would have been possible if Saltz had coaxed some nuance from Armand who shouts many of her lines in the Singing Telegram sketch. We get a hint of what might have been possible when she tones down for a minute in the "Chicken" sketch and the result is very funny.
Woodward (who was in Almost Maine last season) stands out bringing energy and added layers to characters. She and Thorn have visible chemistry on stage. The evening at two hours and 15 minutes with an intermission feels a bit long (cutting that Chicken sketch might do the trick), but overall Love/Sick is entertaining and fun. Also happening:
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