The Muscolino household is awash in
domestic drama, economic difficulties, and cultural acclimation. In playwright Meghan Kennedy’s down-to-earth,
languid world premiere, Napoli, Brooklyn,
at Long Wharf through March 12th, nothing is matter-of-fact for this
Italian-Catholic family. Husband
Nic (Jason Kolotouros) and wife Luda (Alyssa Bresnahan) were part of the wave
of immigrants coming to American shores before World War II. In the play, which takes place in the
early 1960’s, they along with their three children Vita (Carolyn Braver), Tina
(Christina Pumariega), and Francesca (Jordan DiNatale) struggle to navigate the
changing times of that period. As
their lives, along with those of their friends and acquaintances, ebb and flow
a cataclysmic event—the December 16, 1960 plane crash in Park Slope
Brooklyn—changes individual and family destinies forever.
Author Kennedy’s
semi-autobiographic play crafts, what seems like a life-altering story for each
character. The overall effect,
while keeping our interest, comes across as slightly manufactured and
illusory. Can one family’s members
really be dealing with so much all at once—marital turmoil, sexual awakening, a
budding African-American friendship at work, and even a sister’s banishment to
a convent—at one time? The arc of
the play purports to revolve around the immigrant experience and how the
changing mores of the 1960’s affects the Muscolino clan. Yet except for a shoe-horned religious
element the assimilation and accompanying struggles of the first generation
American off-spring and their old world parents doesn’t resonate strongly.
The cast does an admirable job
conveying the emotions and feelings associated with their particular
narrative. For example, Tina’s
budding relationship with Celia (Shrine Babb), an African-American colleague at
work, rings true. However, the characters
can come across as lacking subtlety and depth. The individual stories associated with each character are
not fully integrated into the whole of the play. Only Alyssa Bresnahan as Luda, who is the heart and soul of
the family, manages to successfully insert herself into each vignette of the
production. She is loving and
protective as she attempts to understand and cope with the new reality
spreading around her. Jason Kolotouros
as Nic, is crass, authoritative, and threatening, yet manages a brief,
sympathetic nod after undergoing a transformative experience, before reverting
back to his intimidating and unnerved self.
Carolyn Braver comes across,
initially, as flippant in her portrayal of the eldest daughter Vita. But once temporarily away from the
semi-imprisonment of her cloistered life she reveals a more hardened edge. Christina Pumariega’s Tina is unsophisticated,
but lacks shading in her role. Jordan
DiNatale’s Francesca and Ryann Shane as Connie, the younger daughter’s best
friend, are playful and immature, but come across as juvenile 13 year olds as
opposed to the 17 year olds stated in the script. Graham Winton as Albert Duffy, the neighborhood butcher and
admirer of Luda, is amiable, yet prosaic.
Shrine Babb, in her short time on stage, gives the character of Celia
Jones a more fully nuanced rendering.
Director Gordon Edelstein lets the
story slowly develop as the characters and their stories slowly unfold. Scenes can be touching and brutally
honest, but the overall feel is too episodic. There is a lack of depth to the actor’s portrayal of their
roles, which deprives the characters of generating any sustained passion or
poignancy. Act If’s climax of a holiday
meal meltdown comes across as somewhat forced and artificial due, however, more
to the way scene is written by the author. However, Edelstein’s handling of the Act I finale is flashy,
explosive, and gripping.
Special kudos need to go to set
designer Eugene Lee, Light Designer Ben Stanton, and Sound Designer Fitz Patton
for the audience rousing plane crash sequence—a jolting cacophony of theatrical
wizardry.
Napoli,
Brooklyn, an unrealized slice of the immigrant experience, playing at
the Long Wharf Theater until March 12th.