Last week, I attended the second production within the past
year of the 2024 Pulitzer-Prize winning play, Primary Trust, at the Westport
Country Playhouse. Last year,
TheaterWorks Hartford staged the show, which won the Best Play from the
Connecticut Critics Circle for the 2024-2025 season. As I sat in the audience this time around, I
came to appreciate even more playwright Eboni Booth’s writing, both with her
richly defined characters and the plotting of the work. The show is a gem, and the production at
Westport is outstanding and should not be missed.
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| Greg Stuhr, Lance Coadie Williams, and Alphonso Walker Jr. in Primary Trust. Photo by Carol Rosegg. |
Primary Trust is a show that delves into the character
Kenneth’s personal trauma and how, over the course of 28 years, it has affected
his employment, relationships, self-confidence, and interactions with the
world. The play is, at times,
heartbreaking, but, by the end, uplifting.
Throughout the show, with the ups and downs Kenneth faces, you are
cheering for him to succeed and make connections, which will further his life. By the final curtain of the 90-minute show, I
had a tear in my eye.
The play begins with Kenneth (Alphonso Walker, Jr.) breaking
the fourth wall and addressing the audience, giving background to his life and
town à la the opening moments of the show Our Town. His life in the small urban area is
unassuming and follows the same daily routine for the past 20 years – work at
the town’s second-hand bookstore and then retire for Happy Hour at Wally’s, an
old-style tiki-themed restaurant with his best friend, “Bert (Lance Coadie
Williams).” They share stories, laugh,
drink mai tais, and thoroughly enjoy each other’s company. When the owner of the bookstore suddenly
announces he is selling, Kenneth’s world is thrown for a loop. While he manages to quickly find employment
at a local bank, the future is no longer predictable or secure.
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| Jasminn Johnson and Alphonso Walker Jr. in Primary Trust. Photo by Carol Rosegg. |
This leads to a chain of events that includes a budding
friendship with a Wally’s server, Corrina (Jasminn Johnson), an impactful
connection with his new boss Sam (Greg Stuhr) and, most importantly, his
transformative relationship with Bert.
As the play concludes, Kenneth is a different person, with his life
moving forward in a positive direction.
The pain and internal doubts remain, to some degree, but his continued
changes and on-going development bode well for his future.
The strength of playwright Eboni Booth’s work is its
realism, pacing, and character development.
The plot unfolds at a steady, incremental pace, allowing audiences time
to digest and process what is occurring on stage. The play has been skillfully layered, mixing
audience directed monologues with the banalities of everyday life. Each scene effectively builds on the play’s
previous moments, slowly building a credible portrayal of an individual
overcoming personal demons and hardships.
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| Alphonso Walker Jr. and Lance Coadie Williams in Primary Trust. Photo by Carol Rosegg. |
Director Logan Vaughn adeptly mixes the various dramatic and
comedic elements of the production into a rewarding whole. Her pacing, the rhythm of the show is
critical and she utilizes long pauses within the action to great dramatic
effect. Ms. Vaughn seamlessly moves the
show from scene to scene on Scenic Designer Jack Magaw’s revolving set, which
smoothly features all the locales of the show, keeping the production flowing
with nary a pause. The Director nimbly
incorporates Sound Designer Andrea Allmond’s cha-ching of a cash register that
signifies a quickness in elapsed time.
Much of the success of Primary Trust is due to the actor
Alphonso Walker, Jr. as Kenneth. He is
on-stage for just about the entire 90+ minutes of the play and is able to
command the audience’s attention with his sincerity, vulnerability, and
emotional conflicts. His facial
expressions, alone, convey so much pain and anxiety. Lance Coadie Williams imbues the character of
Bert with confidence, level-headedness, and a discerning intelligence that is
the ying to Kenneth’s yang. Jasminn
Johnson, playing multiple roles, injects a dose of comic relief in her various
restaurant server portrayals. Her
principal character, that of Corrina, is handsomely rendered, and emotionally
grounded, especially in her one-on-one interactions with Kenneth. Greg Stuhr, playing three roles, but,
principally that of the bank manager, Sam, brings a goofy exuberance, yet also
compassion and sensitivity to the role.
Greg Stuhr, Alphonso Walker Jr., and Lance Coadie Williams in Primary Trust. Photo by Carol Rosegg.
Primary Trust, playing at the Westport Country Playhouse
through May 2. Click here for dates,
times, and ticket information.