In the past 25 years there have been a number of potentially catastrophic events for the planet (and I’m not even counting climate change). Remember as the clocks slowly ticked to the year 2000? Y2K and its possible disastrous ramifications gripped the world. The COVID crises produced devastating effects across the globe. Today? Wars in Gaza. The Ukraine. Hot spots in North Korea. The China Sea. The Red Sea. Yet, through the chaos, there is normalcy. People still went or go about their everyday routines. It is this juxtaposition which is at the heart of the Caryl Churchill one-act play, Escaped Alone, playing at the Yale Repertory Theatre through March 30.
Mary Lou Rosato, Sandra
Shipley, Rita Wolf, and LaTonya Borsay in Escaped Alone. Photo © Joan Marcus.
Churchill, whose career spans over 50 years, is one of the United Kingdom’s most celebrated playwrights. Her works push the boundaries of theater and require audiences to sit up and pay close attention. By the end of a production, you may be scratching your head, trying to figure out what just occurred on stage. The play may engage you…or not. Whatever the reaction, a play by Ms. Churchill will provide ample opportunities for discourse and opinions.
In Escaped Alone, we are introduced to three middle aged friends – Vi (Mary Lou Rosato), Sally (Sandra Shipley) and Lena (Rita Wolf) – sitting in a small, lovely garden, handsomely designed by set designer Lia Tubiana. A Mrs. Jarrett (LaTonya Borsay), who is passing by, asks if she could join the trio and, after receiving consent, joins the group. Their chit chat veers in many directions, mostly the mundane and ordinary. The banter is fast-paced, almost staccato in its delivery revealing, little by little, each woman’s personalities, their pasts, and fears. Suddenly, without warning, the stage darkens and two mounted columns of bright lights framing the stage (designed with an overpowering radiance by Stephen Strawbridge), shine intensely into the audience accompanied by a blaring horn. When the momentary brilliance subsides, Mrs. Jarrett stands near the edge of the stage before an ominous projection of bleakness and despair. There, shrouded in semi-darkness, she delivers a stream of consciousness diatribe about an apocalyptic fate. Minutes later, blackness again, and then the four women are back in the serenity of the garden trading stories and banalities. The process repeats – harrowing looks at a dystopian future from Mrs. Jarret, supplemented with designer Shawn Lovell-Boyle’s weirdly pulsating projections. Then, just as quickly as the afternoon gathering had begun, it's over. Mrs. Jarrett stands, bids adieu, and the stage goes to black.
LaTonya Borsay in Escaped Alone. Photo © Joan Marcus.
If the aforementioned description sounds strange, even a bit unsettling, then you have come under the spell of a Caryl Churchill production. The playwright is known to eschew linear structure, looking more to instill ideas in her works for audience members to ponder. For Escaped Alone, the show could possibly be about how we go through our regular, maybe uninteresting lives even when the threat of catastrophe is just moments away. Or, as the world hurtles towards the abyss, there is still serenity, but a sinister ambiance within our lives.
Mary Lou Rosato, Sandra
Shipley, Rita Wolf, and LaTonya Borsay in Escaped Alone. Photo © Joan Marcus.
Director Liz Diamond focuses on the interactions of the four superb actresses, plotting their repartee to a finely tuned pitch. They work together as an outstanding ensemble. Ms. Churchill has conjured up scenarios that never lack for creativity or inventiveness. In this light, she has fashioned a short monologue for each role that reveal an uncomfortable, darker back story for each character. My favorite – Sally’s horrific fear of cats. The result is Ms. Diamond has taken the humor in the play, along with its, surreal nature, and crafted an entertaining, if rather off-center piece of theater.
Escaped Alone, a short 50-minute production, playing at the Yale Repertory Theatre through March 30. Click here for dates, times, and ticket information.
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