In
the abstract, building a show around a hospital deathwatch might seem way too
Grey’s Anatomy for the stage. And indeed, Next Fall by Geoffrey Nauffts, now at
the Blank Canvas Theatre, does fall prey to some of that TV drama weepiness.
But
on the way to a questionable ending, this is one of the most genuinely warm and
funny scripts in recent memory. And the talented cast, under the compassionate
and assured direction of Patrick Ciamacco, misses very few beats in telling this
story of love and loss.
Luke,
in his early twenties, is in a New York City hospital , having been grievously
injured in a car accident. His divorced parents, burly Butch and chatty Arlene,
have flown in from Florida, joining Luke’s friends Holly and Brandon in the
waiting room. Then 40-year-old Adam arrives, Luke’s partner of four years.
In
flashbacks, we see the progression of Adam and Luke’s relationship, from
meeting cute in a Heimlich hug at a catered event to their eventual sharing of
an apartment. We see them joke about some of their differences, age among them,
but there is one divide that seems to grate on both.
While
Luke is a devout Christian, saying grace before eating anything and fully
believing in the afterlife, Adam is a confirmed agnostic. Try as he might, Luke
can’t bring his lover over to the other side of belief.
This
conflict is exacerbated in the hospital where Luke’s parents, clueless about
their son’s homosexual lifestyle (or are they?), try to deal with Adam’s
emotional state.
Using
a play structure that intersperses scenes from the tense present day hospital
situation and the past, playwright Nauffts carves out distinct characters that
are fully realized by the Blank Canvas players.
Lindsay
Pier and Jason Elliott Brown, as Holly and Brandon, handle their supporting
roles skillfully, finding interesting facets that could easily have been left
unplumbed.
As
the parents, Jeffery Glover is gruff and entirely believable, casually tossing
off bigoted comments while also showing his loving, vulnerable side. As brassy Arlene,
Anne McEvoy resists turning her character into a cartoon, thereby succeeding in
shaping a woman who feels out of her element but trying to adapt.
The
pair of lovers could hardly be better. Timothy J. Allen as Luke shows his
devotion to his lover and to his religion in many small ways. These add up to a
powerful conflict. And Curt Arnold finds the sweet spot as Adam, modulating his
unease with religiosity while trying to advance their relationship.
It
is only at the end when one may feel a bit manipulated by the script, as we
witness deathbed emotions and an apparent conversion. But
before then, it is quite a ride—funny, tender and populated by wildly different
people honestly trying to figure out how to live among and with each other.
Next
Fall
Through
October 21 at the Blank Canvas Theatre, 1305 W. 78th St., #211,
blankcanvastheatre.com
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