News on your favorite shows, specials & more!

Review: 1st Stage's TREVOR Focuses on Absurdity

By: Feb. 08, 2017
Enter Your Email to Unlock This Article

Plus, get the best of BroadwayWorld delivered to your inbox, and unlimited access to our editorial content across the globe.




Existing user? Just click login.

Living in Connecticut eight years ago when a chimp being kept as a pet ripped the face off a neighbor, I found it tough to see anything but stark horror in the attack.

But there was a wealth of absurdity in the case of Travis, who appeared in TV commercials and was kept as a pet where he occasionally drove the car and liked to have wine in a goblet with the women who kept him.

It took someone far removed from the case - in this instance, Nick Jones, a writer on Orange is the New Black - to find the humor enough in the unusual story to create a comedy about it, Trevor, which won the 2015 Ovation Award for Playwriting when it premiered.

Alex Levy fought for the rights to give the regional premiere of Trevor at 1st Stage in Tysons, where he is artistic director, and he directs a strangely fascinating production that works largely because of the actor playing the chimp, Doug Wilder.

From the opening moments of the play, you might guess he's just another failing millennial, living with mom, flopping on the couch, not finding work, and flipping on the remote. But very soon - from the way he carries himself low to the body, bouncing always, his hands seemingly so large he appears to be dragging knuckles on the floor - it's clear he's the chimp in question.

Without some hairy primate costume, but in sweatpants and a green sweater vest, it's understood very quickly by the audience that Wilder as overgrown chimp is meant to be in the adjoining cage on the set, but who never gets there much, considering what a wreck the house is where he spends his time, throwing pillows around, kicking over toy bins and ripping up paper.

Trevor talks a mile a minute about hoping to get some work, maybe another Hollywood ad with Morgan Fairchild, but he doesn't seem to be connecting with his Leigh Jameson, who plays the indulgent maternal figure Sandra. Indeed, nothing she says connects with him either, though there are a few words that cut through ("Hollywood!") and there is some bits of sign language between them.

In flashback scenes when he's working, he can only hear the gibberish of the humans around him. He can only guess what they're saying (or what the product is he's supposed to be advertising). Likewise the humans can't pick up what he's saying. But there are some creatures in Trevor's head with whom he can commiserate, such as Oliver (Aaron Bliden), another show biz chimp, who seems to be racking up jobs and brags of having a human wife and half-human children.

Trevor is getting anxious because he's getting none of those jobs. And now the neighbor (Amanda Forstrom) is upset because he's taken a joyride to Dunkin' Donuts and back and parked in her lawn. She's got a new baby to protect!

The local sheriff Jim (Sun King Davis), knows about the chimp and tries to keep peace - he got enough of a kick out of it that he had Trevor pose as a priest at his daughter's christening. But an animal control person (Jacob Yeh) is fully frightened of what quite plainly seems to be a violent creature run amok.

Though there are a lot of similarities with the Connecticut case, luckily there isn't the same climactic violence. And yet, for the sheer size of Wilder and his unpredictability, there is constantly the threat of it. And what is to become of the chimp? Already Sandra's husband seems to have recently died from natural causes. Anxiety permeates the play and puts a grip on the comedy at hand, providing a memorable control. And while it raises the folly of humans trying to raise exotic creatures of the wild as pets, it scarcely pauses to take it too seriously.

While Wilder's manic energy steals the show, the cast is uniformly strong, with Jameson particularly good as the sympathetic keeper and the versatile Forstrom doing double duty as the neighbor and, with a big 70s wig, Morgan Fairchild (though it was a different hairstyle in the neighbor that is one of the reasons given for the Connecticut attack).

Kathryn Kawecki's set is built for the mayhem that occurs on it, with side areas indicating the outdoor cage, a play area, a mystical backyard jungle and next door. Property designer Cindy Landrum Jacobs has to keep track of a lot of junk that flies around. Robbie Hayes' lights seemed a little spotty as it dimmed in some spots meant to hold attention; Sarah O'Halloran created the sound design, minus any obvious "Alley Oop" samples.

Running time: 90 minutes, one intermission.

Photo credit: Doug Wilder in "Trevor" at 1st Stage. Photo by Teresa Castracane.

"Trevor" continues through Feb. 26 at 1st Stage, 1524 Spring Hill Rd., Tysons, VA. 703-854-1856 or online.



Comments

To post a comment, you must register and login.



Videos