[NEohioPAL] Berko review: DARK RIDE @ convergence-continuum; Dobama extends HUMBLE BOY

Roy Berko royberko at yahoo.com
Mon May 24 15:56:26 PDT 2010


A ‘DARK RIDE’ at convergence continuum; Dobama extends ‘HUMBLE BOY’

Roy Berko

(Member, American Theatre Critics Association)


--THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS--

Lorain County Times--Westlaker Times--Lakewood News Times--Olmsted-Fairview Times

--coolcleveland.org

You don’t go to convergence-continuum to see traditional theatre fare.  You go to see what off-the-wall script Artistic Director Clyde Simon has pulled out of his theatrical hat.  Simon’s motto seems to be, “The weirder, the better.”  And, if that’s what draws you to con-con, you’ll be thrilled with his most recent find, ‘DARK RIDE.’

A dark ride or ghost train is the British term for an indoor amusement ride where the participants are guided through specially lit scenes that typically contain animation, sound, music, and special effects.  The effect is surreal.  This concept is the basis for Len Jenkin’s  ‘DARK RIDE,’ in which peculiar actions increasingly create “convoluted disquisitions on the nature of coincidence.”

As one past reviewer of a production of the script stated, "’DARK RIDE’ offers quirky entertainment for an audience that is not terribly concerned about making sense of what is going on.”  To which I say, “Right on!”

The cast of characters includes a book reading young woman whose boyfriend has disappeared, the boyfriend (a thief), a couple who from time to time appear to run a carnival, a would-be translator of what is possibly a fake third-century-B.C. Chinese document, a blustering soldier of fortune, a waitress,  and a woman who is an expert on coincidence, and assures us that  “Jonah was in the belly of the whale for three days and Jesus was entombed for three days. What a coincidence!”

Jenkin weaves the mélange together into a whole that he assumes the viewer will, somehow, be able to merge.   But like a fun house ride, he also allows for the fact that the whole doesn’t have to blend together.  By the end, as the young man sitting next to me stated, “I’m not interested in philosophy, just tell me how it ended and why.”

Geoffrey Hoffman has the task of directing the play.  Despite that on opening night there were numerous line flubs, all in all, he does a nice job.   There were many laughs from the sold out opening night audience, some because of the plot’s ridiculousness, some from actually funny lines.

Lucy Bredeson-Smith, she of tall angular body and “creative make-up,” fills the role of the laughing lady of coincidence at the amusement park, with her usual bizarre sense of humor and high quality acting.  The rest of the cast fulfills their roles in blending together the ride, with various levels of success.

Capsule Judgement:  ‘DARK RIDE’ isn’t for everyone.  It takes a special person, with a strange sense of the ironic and flexible logic, to enjoy the machinations of Len Jenkin’s mind.  If you are one of those, you’ll appreciate con-con’s latest offering.  And then you can return to see ‘HUNTER GATHERS,’ Peter Sin Nachtrieb’s “outrageously libidinous farce meets penetrating social satire” from July 16th though August 14th.

‘DARK RIDE’ runs through August 14 at 8 pm Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays at convergence-continuum’s artistic home, The Liminis, at 2438 Scranton Rd. in Cleveland’s Tremont neighborhood. For information and reservations call 216-687-0074.

Dobama’s HUMBLE BOY extended through June 5, 2010

In response to sell out performances, Dobama Theatre announces the extension of HUMBLE BOY by Charlotte Jones.  HUMBLE BOY will be performed for one additional weekend, June 2 – June 5, 2010.   Extended performance dates are:
Wednesday, June 2 @ 7:30 p.m.
Thursday, June 3 @ 7:30 p.m.
Friday, June 4 @ 8:00 p.m.
Saturday, June 5 @ 8:00 p.m.
Tickets are available by calling the Dobama box office at (216) 932-3396, or by visiting www.dobama.org.
 
Roy Berko's blog, which contains theatre and dance reviews from 2001 through 2010, as well as his consulting and publications information, can be found at http://royberko.info
His reviews can also be found on www.coolcleveland.com and NeOHIOpal (to subscribe visit http://mailman.listserve.com/listmanager/listinfo/neohiopal.)



      



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