Bob (Tracy Letts) and Jennifer
(Toni Collette) are sitting outside their house one night. They talk, they bicker, they don’t
really communicate. Jennifer gets
mad. Bob is perplexed. They are married. The new neighbors Pony (Marisa Tomei)
and John (Michael C. Hall) show up and disrupt the quietness. They are daft. They say inappropriate and nonsensical
things. Bob is ill. His comments can be biting and
sarcastic. He has a syndrome with
no proven medical protocol. Pony
and John go home.
Such is beginning of Will Eno’s, The Realistic Joneses, a mildly amusing,
off-center piece of theater. In his
recent Off-Broadway production, The Open
House, Eno stated: “Playwrights have been trying to write
family plays for a long time…They try to
answer the question, ‘Can things really change?’ People have been trying nobly
for years and years to have plays solve in two hours what hasn't been solved in
many lifetimes. This has to stop.”
Unfortunately, once again, Mr. Eno is true to his words as the
four characters simply interact, get angry, ruminate about life, and behave
oddly. He takes a matter-of-fact
situation—ill family member and colorful neighbors—then bends and twists it
into humorous and absurdist vignettes that he cobbles together in an attempt to
coalesce into a whole.
The first part of the 90 minute, intermission-less
play bodes well for the audience, but soon devolves into, well, a mixture of
strangeness and struggle. It would
be interesting to see the type of play that could be crafted if Eno employed a
more structured narrative, while still retaining his skewed sensibility.
The star-studded cast works well within the orbit of
the playwright’s machinations.
Toni Collette’s Jennifer, more anchored in reality, conveys concern,
pain, and loneliness as she attempts to deal with her husband’s medical
condition and cope with his irrational and testy behavior. Tracy Letts, showing very little
affect, can be incredibly insensitive and irritating as he masks how truly
afraid he is of his disorder.
Marisa Tomei is child-like, loopy, and the flakiest of the quartet. She can be very funny but, like all the
characters in the show, there is an undercurrent of anxiety and distress as she
moves through life. Michael C.
Hall has the most difficult role of The Real
Joneses. He must be lucid,
eccentric, an oddball, and erratic, which he accomplishes with aplomb.
Through the many scene changes Director Sam Gold gives
his actors plenty of leeway for their flights of fancy. Not much action happens within the show
so Gold is more into positioning of the characters as they enter the stage for
their scene. During the start of
the play this is good enough to keep the audience’s attention but, towards the
latter half of the production, the inactivity becomes somewhat wearing and
tiresome.
The Real Joneses, more misses then hits.
Early in the play, the characters discuss “men”, and Bob says “men” with a sigh.
ReplyDeleteAt the end of the play, Bob says he likes mints and ends with “mint”.
Do you think that is a conscious “echoing” of the earlier “men”, contrasting a common conversational topic of some importance with the absurdity of mints?