[NEohioPAL] none too fragile - Christine Howey review of "On an Average Day"

production at nonetoofragile.com production at nonetoofragile.com
Fri Oct 12 07:34:18 PDT 2012


Hello everyone!

Christine Howey of Scene Magazine posted a review of "On an Average Day"
on her blog.  Link and review follow.  Please check it out!

-Jaysen
~none too fragile

http://raveandpan.blogspot.com/2012/10/on-average-day-none-too-fragile.html

Thank goodness there’s an endless supply of dysfunctional people in the
world, and even more in our imaginations. So we’re assured of never
running short of the kind of brothers who are featured in On An Average
Day by John Kolvenbach, now at the None Too Fragile theater in Akron.

Even though there are plenty of edgy plays about unsteady people living in
squalid conditions, this script is a more well written example of the
genre, with dialog that often crackles with mordant wit.

Squatting in his rundown family house, in a kitchen piled with old
newspapers, Bob is a hot mess. But his brother Jack has arrived to help.
Or has he?

As the two argue over beers grabbed from an odiferous fridge while
listening to a bathroom shower that turns on at random moments, we learn a
bit about their family’s history.

It’s not until the second act that more details come into focus, with a
clever and unique turn that almost makes the script work splendidly.

The production benefits from two fine performances by co-directors Sean
Derry and Mark Mayo. It’s nice to have Derry (co-founder of the defunct
Bang and Clatter Theatre) back on an area stage, even though he’s playing
his umpty-umpth slouching, mumbling derelict. Using his well-honed
naturalistic delivery to splendid effect, Derry fully embodies the
mentally tormented Bob.

And Mayo’s Jack, a supposedly more grounded adult than his squirrely bro,
provides solid counterpoint to Derry’s rants. In the second act, Mayo hits
cruising speed with a diatribe about their father that is totally
gripping.

But this is far from a perfect script or an ideal production. Playwright
Kolvenbach omits many details about the brothers’ lives, including
virtually no mention of their mother or how they existed in their teens.

And while actors Derry and Mayo are often brilliant, overlapping their
lines in a manner that feels true and honest, they also occasionally
disconnect from the audience and the material.

While the overlapping dialogue is done to perfection, it eliminates the
need for the characters to hear and bounce off each other. This lessens
the tension and becomes tedious at times. Also, there are many moments
when speeches are delivered into the middle distance, instead of at each
other. Perhaps a director who wasn’t acting in the scene at the time could
have corrected some of this.

Even with the glitches, there is snap in much of Kolvenbach’s material,
and a second act turn that perfectly justifies the title. And that makes
this first work by the newly reborn None Too Fragile theater a flawed but
feisty winner.

On An Average DayThrough October 20 at the None Too Fragile Theater, 1841
Merriman Road (in the back room of Pub Bricco), Akron, 330-671-4563.




More information about the NEohioPAL mailing list