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Arts

Theater Review: The Realistic Joneses at Live Arts

There’s something a bit off about The Realistic Joneses.

“Maybe it’s me,” you think at first. You’re sitting so close to the middle-aged couple you’re practically on top of them. She’s talking about the beauty of the night air and the owl she can hear in the distance. He’s staring down at hands twisted together, harrumphing with irritation. It’s awfully intimate, the way you’re hovering in other people’s tension.

But you’re in a theater and you’ve paid to watch this, so that’s exactly what you do: eavesdrop on the world’s most realistic conversation and try not to squirm with discomfort.

The Realistic Joneses
Live Arts
Runs through May 13

Outside a small kitchen, pacing a small AstroTurf lawn, she tosses up conversational softballs and he smacks them down with frustration.

“Maybe we should paint the house,” says Misses.

“Why?” Mister asks. “Won’t we just have to paint it again after that?”

His logic is silly, childish, perfect. Once you start laughing, it’s hard to stop.

You realize this curmudgeon is inadvertently funny. You also find out that he’s sick.

His wife hints at something serious and confusing, but he refuses to talk about it. You see her repressing her own frustration, but she refuses to talk about that.

The night air may be lovely, but it’s also tense. That’s why your heart jumps (as do Misses and Mister) when a muffled crash sounds from offstage.

Could it be a strange animal? A prowler? A plot twist? You pray for something to break the soupy, suburban stillness.

That’s when a young couple appears, offering a bottle of wine. As they introduce themselves as new neighbors John and Pony Jones, you learn Mister and Misses are named Bob and Jennifer Jones. Four Joneses, one neighborhood. What are the odds?

At this point, the dialogue starts throwing off sparks, hilarious one-liners and abrupt observations, and you finally realize what felt off at first. It’s like watching a play about real people, all of whom are a little bit weird.

You’ve stepped into an alternate universe populated by strangers, but they all feel so damn familiar. You’re listening to non-sequitur dialogue, but it mirrors the scattershot logic of your brain. The Realistic Joneses is realistic, yes; it’s a human, authentic comedy, but it’s also borderline absurd.

Welcome to the wild world of Will Eno, the playwright who penned Joneses in 2014. A finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in Drama, Eno is known for his unique brand of comedy, which turns on quirky, true-to-life conversation.

Fran Smith, the director of Live Arts’ version of Joneses, certainly had her work cut out for her. A play like this depends on timing, nuance and actors who can take their cues apropos of nothing.

To her credit, Smith gives her audience a world that ought to do Eno proud. She’s given her actors room to play, to deepen their characters and develop unscripted backstories that rush into the silence between sentences. Like the simple but effective set pieces, we understand how a half-formed compliment or bad joke conveys discomfort, or longing, or lust.

The Realistic Joneses can be described as a series of short sketches happening in chronological order. Each sketch features a few (or all) of the same four characters. Time is progressing, and a plot is unfolding, but it rambles and hints rather than progressing in strong, linear strokes.

For that reason, perhaps, I found myself getting impatient somewhere in the first act. More thematic development! More narrative clarity! Show me some progress and make me care!

Beneath my brain’s demands, however, I recognized Eno’s integrity. This show is committed to authentic patterns of human behavior. I couldn’t fairly demand a cinematic character breakthrough every time someone cleaned the kitchen.

By the second act, though, I was fully invested. I saw glimpses of depth in each of the characters, I craved resolution to unfolding mysteries, and I definitely wanted to laugh some more.

In fact, the actors deserve applause for bringing this show to life. In the wrong hands, I’m sure it could easily be rendered unwatchable, but Live Arts’ version was actually fun. 

I loved Jack Walker’s manic take on John Jones, the young, doting husband full of quirks and secrets. He embraced his character’s most unusual brain, hardening with anger, softening with pain, and delivered one-liners with total conviction. (My personal favorite: “I saw you crying and eating a PowerBar, and I thought, ‘Wow. That is one sad, busy person.’”)

Adrienne Oliver plays Pony Jones, a germophobe who tends to avoid thinking too hard about the hard stuff. She warms her character’s self-centered behavior with earnest sweetness and flickers of self-doubt, holding fast to the good in herself and others despite any evidence to the contrary.

Jennifer Jones is the long-suffering wife who gives up her job and her travel dreams to become a full-time caregiver. Kate Adamson manages to express the full range of her character’s tangled emotions—frustration, tenderness, outrage and resignation—often in just a few sentences.

Bill LeSueur (C-VILLE Weekly’s creative director) plays Bob, who looks at his own mortality sideways. Bob joins us closed off, self-centered and awkward, but LeSueur’s blossoming across two acts was incredibly satisfying.

Lucky, because The Realistic Joneses isn’t the sort of play that gives you a satisfying ending. It’s not unhappy or frustrating, I’m pleased to say, but it doesn’t wrap up with a neat little bow.

It’s like life, after all. Most chapters don’t end with a scripted flourish and a heroic kiss. It’s more like an unsung conversation or the hoot of an owl, a moment that passes without our awareness and appears only in hindsight how whole and human it was.

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Arts

ARTS Pick: The Realistic Joneses

Merging the profound with the trivial, Will Eno’s absurdist script for The Realistic Joneses plays out like a tough-topic sketch comedy. When new neighbors arrive, two couples get to know each other through unlikely circumstances that bring them together and push them apart in unexpected ways. The Hollywood Reporter calls the story a “mordant, melancholy existential sitcom.”

Runs through May 13. $20-25, times vary. Live Arts, 123 E. Water St. 977-4177.

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Arts

Theater Review: Live Arts’ Peter and the Starcatcher hits the spot

In a new book due out in August, In Search of Stardust: Amazing Micro-Meteorites and Their Terrestrial Imposters, Norwegian musician and amateur scientist Jon Larsen explains how it’s possible for anyone with a microscope to find cosmic debris. He estimates that more than 100 metric tons of alien objects hit our planet every day—and thanks to some invaluable advice gleaned from Larsen’s years of dedication draining the dreck of gutters and other unsavory places, we can now all discover previously hidden stardust for ourselves, right where we live.

Perhaps this scientific breakthrough may dim a touch of the mystical shimmer we ascribe to the elusive twinkling across the night sky, but it also teaches a valuable lesson: You don’t always have to go far to find amazing things.

Take Live Arts. Located in our own proverbial backyard, the nonprofit theater mainstay opened its latest production, Peter and the Starcatcher, on March 10 with an energetic, frantic arrival deserving of discovery and appreciation. Steadily led by stellar comedic talent, the whirlwind two-and-a-half-hour trip to the land of Rundoon smoothly navigates the topsy-turvy plot of the 2009 Peter Pan prequel. With a family-friendly vibe, director Bree Luck presents an over-the-top mix of sharp one-liners, snarky asides, vaudeville musical bits and drag show aesthetics.

Highlighting opening night, understudy Camden Luck was wholly believable as cutesy, precocious starcatcher Molly Aster, a girl on a mission who never lapses in her purposefully too-proper English accent. Photo by Martyn Kyle
Mila Cesaretti as precocious starcatcher Molly Aster (she shares the role with Camden Luck) and Carter Mace as Peter. Photo by Martyn Kyle

 

There’s a lot happening in this play. Here’s the gist: A magical British father-daughter team are sent on a secret mission by Queen Victoria to save the world from tyranny by collecting “starstuff,” navigating rough seas, captivity, charismatic pirates and a short-tempered tribe of English-deported Italians. Oh, and an orphan who becomes Peter Pan.

Of course there’s much more to it than that, including coming-of-age themes, feminist perspectives, questions of leadership, the fluidity of language, meta-theatrical moments of third-person self-narration and many swift anachronistic jumps out of its late-19th-century setting to cultural references from the last 50 years (Michael Jackson, Ayn Rand). Yet, these grad school critical approaches obscure the point of the show: having a good time with a fantastical, swashbuckling adventure story.

“Sometimes pieces of them fall to Earth—little bits that look like sand. Can you keep a secret?” Molly Aster

Highlighting opening night, Camden Luck, who shares the role with Mila Cesaretti, was wholly believable as cutesy, precocious starcatcher Molly Aster, a girl on a mission who never lapses in her purposefully too-proper English accent. Carter Mace, the boy who becomes Peter, aptly took on his role with the tentative self-doubt of an adolescent, buttressed by amusing fellow orphans Elliot Rossman as Prentiss and Alex Ramirez as the ever-hungry Ted.

Other noteworthy performances include Aaron Richardson’s commendable dual-persona work as cheeky Mrs. Bumbrake and a mermaid named Teacher, and Scott Dittman’s portrayal as raunchy buccaneer yes-man Smee.

Peter and the Starcatcher
Runs through March 26
Live Arts

But, without question, the two morally bankrupt captains steal the show, run away with it and then resell it back to the crowd at a sizable profit. Mark McLane’s Blackstache and Amalia Oswald’s Bill Slank carried the night with expert comic bombast. Lustfully hogging the spotlight in this early iteration of Hook, McLane’s enchanting Norma Desmond-level egomania enchants with a penchant for malapropisms and a keen hatred of children; his villainy is ultimately so inviting that it makes him the play’s most lovable character. And though his slick evil foppery is unequaled, Oswald’s incomparable slapstick prowess and impossibly wide-mouthed howls from the poop deck heights of Neverland are beyond absurd in the best way possible.

The ship-shaped stage is a striking piece of scenery made all the more remarkable as the versatile cast admirably plays up the show’s bare-bones “special effects”: cats and birds fly with string, sea battles are re-enacted with toy models, and monstrous beasts are merely hinted at with cutouts of sharp-toothed triangles. The actors make it disarmingly easy to suspend belief with some well-placed rope: A boxing ring and the threatening waves of the open sea spring up and redefine the space in seconds. This visual kick underscores the text’s message about imagination and the sacrifices of becoming an adult, but offers proof that, as an audience, we’re still ready to dive back into that wide-eyed willingness of childhood.

So maybe it’s just a funny coincidence that Larsen’s monumental space dust findings are becoming known now. Though as Molly and her father speak through their starstuff amulets in Larsen’s native Norwegian tongue it’s worth remembering that the cosmic powder they’re so desperate to protect is, in reality, all around us and continuing to pelt the world on a daily basis. Ultimately, truth often surprises us by revealing itself to be stranger than fiction, but in the case of Live Arts’ Peter and the Starcatcher, fiction is clearly the more entertaining way to spend three hours: yucking it up aboard the Neverland, while being carried safely away from the stench of micro-meteorite specimens oozing out of any drainpipes.

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Arts

ARTS Pick: Peter and the Starcatcher

The teenager-loaded cast and crew of Peter and the Starcatcher “keep the grown-ups on our toes and bring fantastic ideas” according Live Arts’ Bree Luck. The production wields credits for more than 45 community members and offers a special artistic collaboration between apprentice and mentor in bringing Peter Pan’s backstory to life.

Through March 26. $20-25, times vary. Live Arts, 123 E. Water St., 977-4177.

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Arts

ARTS Pick: Well

“This play is not about my mother and me,” the character of Lisa insists at the beginning of Well. The play is, in fact, about Lisa and her mother, who cannot heal herself despite her extraordinary ability to heal a changing neighborhood. But Well is about many other things, too—the idea of wellness, the fraught, often mysterious relationship that exists between parents and their children and the complicated question, “Do we create our own illness?” Live Arts founding member Larry Goldstein directs Deborah Arenstein and Patricia Sepulveda in Lisa Kron’s warm and insightful autobiographical show that spins into unexpected (and rather hilarious) territory.

Through February 25. $20-25, times vary. Live Arts, 123 E. Water Street. 977-4177.

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Arts

ARTS Pick: ‘Electric Baby’

In Stefanie Zadravec’s Electric Baby, a mysterious moon floats over six characters who navigate through three stories that connect after a car accident. Cast members dig into the depths of sorrow, proffer folk remedies and search for peace throughout the dark comedy.

Through November 5. $20-25, times vary. Live Arts, 123 E. Water St. 977-4177. 

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Arts

Live Arts executive director, artistic director resign

Live Arts community theater will be going through a couple of changes in the next few months. The Live Arts Board of Directors announced this afternoon the resignations of Executive Director Matt Joslyn, who has been with the organization for six and a half years, and Artistic Director Julie Hamberg, who has been there for five. Joslyn will stay on through the end of the summer, while Hamberg will be staying through the end of the month.

Live Arts, founded in 1990, provides a space for both children and adults to experience theater, music and acting in a community-theater setting.

While at the helm, Joslyn  ran successful fundraising campaigns for capital and operational support, including a building remodeling to create open lobby spaces, and raising subscription levels by 350 percent. Joslyn’s focus while at Live Arts has been on bringing the community together, including his roles serving on the Cultural Plan Steering Committee for Piedmont Council for the Arts and working with the Virginia Commission for the Arts. In addition he directed four musicals and oversaw Live Arts’ participation in the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in Scotland.

In her time with the organization, Hamberg sought to bring in productions that engaged a broader circle of the community, while directing five productions and serving as a mentor for all artistic work that came through the  doors. She also increased community engagement through dozens of projects, including weekend intensives in acting, playwriting, technical work and directing.

According to the release, the Live Arts Board of Directors is working on transition plans.

“Again, we thank Matt and Julie for their commitment and passion, and for the ways they have shared these will all of us,” the release from the board of directors states. “Please join us in wishing them well on their next ‘stage.'”

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News

Live Arts’ loss: Show must go on without Pape

Howard Pape spent his next-to-last day alive installing a real tree—upside down, so that its roots would be the branches—for the set he’d helped design for Live Arts’ upcoming production of To Kill a Mockingbird, according to director Fran Smith. Performing such formidable tasks for the community theater was his creative outlet, say his family and friends.

His unexpected death February 28 at home at age 63 has left those close to him reeling, particularly at Live Arts, where the March 11 opening night for Mockingbird was fewer than two weeks away.

In the days following his death, at least a dozen people came in over several nights to paint, install lighting and build railings for the upstairs courtroom set, Smith says. “All of his carpenter friends showed up.”

Pape and his wife, Karen, have “underwritten almost every show I’ve done the past 10 years,” says Smith. “And he’s been the master carpenter on every one.”

Owner of Central Virginia Waterproofing and co-founder of the nonprofit Building Goodness, Pape discovered a passion for behind-the-scenes theater when his then-16-year-old son appeared in a Live Arts production of The Cripple of Inishmaan. “Howard wanted to keep an eye on him and he built the set,” says Karen Pape, president of the Live Arts board of directors. “He never left.”

Live Arts was a “touchstone for him,” she says, and he loved the variety of people in the huge community of volunteers who support the theater. “I’m a member of the least exclusive club in Charlottesville—the friends of Howard Pape,” she says. They met on the Corner in 1974 when both were students at UVA and were married for 38 years.

Pape understood carpentry and could build anything, says his wife. Designing sets “opened his world,” she says. “It was a gift someone gave him.”

Longtime friend Jay Kessler, who helped Pape install a pool as part of the set for a production of Metamorphoses, agrees. “He found an outlet away from construction and he focused it at Live Arts.”

Kessler describes Pape’s legacy as “easy, natural generosity” and of service. Both at Live Arts and Building Goodness, Pape would “give people what they need,” he says.

Pape went to Haiti more than 20 times and had a great affection for the people living there, who, despite their poverty, found a lot of joy in the present moment, says Karen Pape.

“That was one of Howard’s great gifts,” she says. “He always found a lot of joy in the present moment.”

“This was his place to be creative,” says Smith. After the arduous arboreal installation, Smith says she told her friend, “‘I could never do these plays without you. I love you.’ And I gave him a hug. At least my last words were of gratitude.”

At Live Arts, she says, “We have not yet realized the void.”

“His death has left a huge hole,” concurs Live Arts director Matt Joslyn. “He’s the kind of human who has a big presence wherever he goes.”

And while everyone is rallying for To Kill a Mockingbird, he says, “There’s a lot of sadness in the building.”