Saturday, March 4, 2023

"Getting There" at New Conservatory Theatre Center

 

NCTC production photo by Lois Tema
I don't often get to shows at NCTC, despite the fact that I used to work in the neighborhood. They seem to fly under my radar a lot, though I have quite enjoyed several shows we have seen there. One that didn't get mentioned on this blog (since I was on hiatus at the time) was their production of Head Over Heels in 2019. It was fun and very approachable. This play was also under my radar, but we got invited, so we went.

The Play

Getting There is a world premiere of a commissioned work by Dipika Guha. I have to admit it feels a bit rough at times, despite the fact that we were seeing the closing performance of the run. So I suspect those are actual holes in the script, not so much issues with the production.

Part of the issue is structural: the play eschews a linear timeline, opting to bounce among flashbacks and the present time. It's only covering a few days total, so it's unclear that there is really all that much to be gained by yanking the audience around, in ways that are indicated mostly by projections that aren't all that obvious to the viewer. I'm still not sure I caught all of the guideposts. Mostly these devices seem to be an effort to hide the (very quickly revealed, anyway) relationships among the characters. There are no big surprises there--I suspect the overall structure of the play would be enhanced by just writing the timeline straight.

There are only five characters in the play, although because of the structure of the play, it's unclear that's what we're dealing with, at least at first. The play initially seems more like a series of vignettes, though eventually we realize the actors are playing consistent characters throughout. Julie and Kai are American tourists in Paris. Julie meets a distraught Ira while Kai is off doing...something. Kai gets picked up by Radha, while Anissa is waiting for her at the train station. Radha and Anissa turn out to be married. Ira is Anissa's daughter. Julie has inexplicable feelings for Kai, who is supposed to be marrying someone else when she's not being picked up by older French women.

It's more coherent than my description makes it sound, but at the same time, the convolutions seem rather contrived and for limited reasons. Ultimately, most of the characters make a fair amount of sense, but Kai never does (to me, anyway).

The Production

It's a pretty sparse production, in NCTC's smaller theater space. Pretty much just a black box with a couple of benches and some curtains, with a few items on the walls. I kind of wished the cast had been allowed to just leave things in place, rather than rearranging the few pieces between scenes, but that seems to be director Nailah Harper-Malveaux's preference. Similarly, we have characters leave the stage by ducking behind a diaphanous curtain, so they're still quite visible to us, but apparently not to the other characters.

Most of the acting is quite good. The French characters in particular (Laura Domingo as Ira, Simone Bloch as Anissa, and Desiree M. Rogers as Radha) all feel well-rounded and coherent. Lauren Andrei Garcia as Julie is fine, if constantly exasperated (not sure that's entirely justified by the script--I'd like to have seen a little more range). Leigh M. Marshall as Kai is a kind of a nebulous cypher. She seems to wander aimlessly through life, evincing privilege and seeming utter lack of curiosity or engagement with others. There is absolutely no indication of why Julie is attracted to her at all--nothing we see in the play has Kai showing anything other than neglect or disregard for her. The script doesn't help here, but I would have hoped someone would have at least tried to add some relating to the relationship.

Anyway, the cast does pretty well with the thin script they're given. The relationship between Anissa and Radha has the core of something interesting to it, and their relationship to Ira has promise.

Bottom Line

This doesn't feel like a completed play: more like a draft that got put on stage before it was ready. That said, NCTC has done a pretty good job of staging it, but the difficulties with the script make it hard to take away much from the play overall.

I probably wouldn't recommend it very highly, but since it was the last show of the run, my recommendation wouldn't mean much anyway. There is the core of something in the play, and the production was good. I just wish they had fleshed out the story a bit more before putting it on stage.


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