I find it fascinating that complete
strangers will bare their souls to anonymous advice columnists, seeking their
opinion on everything from relationships, sex, careers, and their mental and
physical well-being. That’s what occurs
on stage in Long Wharf’s production of Tiny
Beautiful Things. Co-conceived by
Marshall Heyman, Thomas Kail, and Nia Vardalos, and adapted by the latter from
the best-selling book by advice columnist Cheryl Strayed, this wisp of a show
(it’s only 75 minutes long) is structured as a question and answer give and
take. Three actors, Brian Sgambati,
Elizabeth Ramos, and Paul Pontrelli, play numerous characters writing (reciting)
very intimate and personal pleas to Sugar, Strayed’s anonymous, online pen
name, for her thoughtful, insightful and heartfelt responses.
Ms. Vardalos has not given the play
much dramatic arc so while the initial set-up is intriguing, after 15 minutes of
the back and forth my interest began to wane.
The impassioned appeals for help and the subsequent replies are powerful
and emotionally charged, but there needs to be a degree of theatricality to
strengthen and diversify the output on stage.
Ms. Strayed, an accomplished writer
(she penned the 2012 best-seller, Wild:
From Lost to Found on the Pacific Coast Trail), can dazzle, as demonstrated
in the play, with her lengthy, sensitive, and highly personal elucidations. What made her an Internet sensation was the
honest, intimate experiences she shared with those individuals who wrote to
her.
The actress Cindy Cheung beautifully
and compellingly portrays the advice columnist.
She effectively conveys a world weariness and depth of experience like
the woman she portrays. Ms. Cheung delivers
her responses to the emailed letters with an intensity of feeling and
compassion. The other cast members earnestly
communicate their distress, grief, and hardships with apprehension and
optimistic anticipation.
Director Ken Rus Schmoll has smartly
cast actors that are everyday types of people—those you might have as
co-workers, meet in a coffee shop, or exercise side by side with at the gym. They more realistically suggest individuals
that may seek online help. Setting the
action outside allows the actors to wander about the yard, in and out of the
spotlight.
The set for the interactions, by Designer
Kimie Nishikawa, is a space occupied by a two-story house with a porch,
astroturf, to signify a grassy lawn, and a picnic table center stage. All the action takes place around the wooden
table. While eye-catching and
well-constructed, the sizeable set is primarily an expensive backdrop.
Sound Designer Leah Gelpe’s neighborhood
sonances of insects, children playing in the distance, and a train passing by
in the distance, are heard just in the background, but add a naturalness to the
production.
Tiny Beautiful
Things, at
the Long Wharf Theatre through March 10th.
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