Luna Gale
Rebecca Gilman
Jamie Jones, Devin S. O'Brien & Alix Cuadra |
On any given day in the U.S., over 400,000 kids are living
in foster care environments, with at least a quarter of those placed by the
courts with blood relatives in what is classified as kinship care. Social workers are assigned to each of those
children to ensure where they live is safe, with whom they live is a proper
fit. Caroline is one such social
worker. Caroline currently has ninety
active cases. For each of the ninety,
Caroline must investigate the possible caregiver, visit frequently the living
situations, see the child interacting with the caregiver, determine what the
parents must do to ready themselves for once again being a full-time parent,
and ultimately recommend to the court when and if the real parents can once
again see (much less assume parenting) their child.
Luna Gale is a newborn, just one of Caroline’s ninety
cases. Her late-teen parents are on
meth. Luna Gale is underweight and
sick. Her Grandmother wants to take over
her care.
Thus opens Rebecca Gilman’s gripping play, Luna Gale, now receiving its Bay Area
premiere at Aurora Theatre Company.
Complications and mysteries multiply as Caroline digs into this one
case; and the Aurora production soars with a director, cast, and creative team
who ensure the audience will never again forget the heart-breaking situations,
the moral dilemmas, and the near-impossible tasks that thousands of social
workers like Caroline face every day, 365 days a year.
Jamie Jones is quick to establish her Caroline as always efficient
and effective. She enters the hospital’s
emergency waiting room with an air of an investigator, plummeting the two
meth-high kids (also parents of Luna Gale) with multiple questions, picking up
on any detail reluctantly offered and going for the jugular with yet another
question or even a blunt opinion/conclusion.
It is not that she is uncaring. It is just that she is serious about
protecting the unseen baby who has been ignored for some number of hours/days
before being rushed to the hospital by the doped-out parents. And she needs to -- no she must come to a conclusion quickly what
happens to this baby. She assesses this
baby must be placed in some sort of foster situation out of the parents’ reach
(at least for now), and she has decided that in a matter of ten minutes because
she has many more cases to attend to before day’s end (which is probably late
tonight).
With a façade of objectivity that is not totally unfeeling
but more Solomon-like in its quick assessing and judging nature, Ms. Jones is
pinpoint perfection in her portrayal of Caroline. At the same time, situations (her own and
those of this case) will complicate and muddy the waters. As the days of the play’s story tick by, Ms.
Jones will show an incredible range of emotions ranging from anger to anguish,
caring to critical, pride to prejudice.
Throughout, she will enlighten the audience in ways few of us probably
had clues at the play’s beginning about how the life of a social worker borders
each day between a job doing God’s work and a job for a person condemned to
hell. In the end, Jamie Jones as
Caroline is a social worker who will not be soon forgotten by any in the
audience.
Devin S. O'Brien, Alix Cuadra & Jamie Jones |
Alix Cuadra and Devin S. O’Brien are Luna Gale’s parents,
Karlie and Peter. Ms. Cuadra’s Karlie is
a mom who clearly is not ready to be one.
The pull that meth has on her is strong; and its effects are seen in her
hollow-looking stares, her tense body, and her half-spoken answers. There are sparks of love and caring that suddenly
emerge in her countenance for the baby she cannot presently have in her sole
possession; but those brief sparks can fade quickly as angry reactions erupt
when questions go places she does not them want to go.
As Peter, Devin S. O’Brien begins as a slouched-over,
non-responsive, do-nothing dad in the hospital waiting room who would rather
sleep off his high than answer Caroline’s questions. A week or so later, he emerges as a young guy
eager to please the social worker, even as he shakes his foot uncontrollably,
bites his non-existing nails, and scratches almost-to-bring-blood his
neck. He is a kid now crashing and
trying to stay off meth for good. The
fully credible, heart-touching performance that Mr. O’Brien gives as a young
dad who really does want that baby back is one of the most stellar among many
strong performances of the evening.
As probably true for any of the thousands during Caroline’s
long career as a social worker, there is nothing simple about this one case of
Luna Gale. Caroline is after all only
human and can hardly be blamed for mishearing Luna’s grandmother, Cindy. She really did not mean to laugh when she heard
Cindy say that she had twelve years ago accepted Jesus as her “personal
trainer” (instead of “personal savior”).
Laura Jane Bailey & Kevin Kemp |
Laura Jane Bailey is superb as the evangelical-leaning
Grandmother who is pushing to be the baby’s permanent foster parent. A major dilemma for Caroline is that the big
smiling Cindy is one moment sweet, accommodating, and apparently capable of being
a wonderful caregiver and the next moment, off on a frenzied tirade rattling that
“the end days are upon us” and claiming if Luna lives with her daughter Karlie,
“she’ll never be saved.” Ms. Bailey is
just getting her Cindy into first gear for what will be a full-blown battle to
win possession of her granddaughter.
The complications for Caroline only mount. Kevin Kemp is the soft-spoken,
enticing-with-kind-words Pastor James who allies himself with Cindy to convince
Caroline to recommend the grandmother for permanent parenting of Luna Gale. His handsome demeanor and genuine-enough
smile (or is it?) are deliciously intriguing as we and Caroline try to figure
out him and his real motives.
Jamie Jones & Joshua Marx |
And why does Caroline’s much-younger-than-she boss, Cliff,
appear to be best buds with the Pastor as the two now stand in her office? Cliff is a boy-manager who seems to have it
in for Caroline and is all over this one particular case for some reason. Why is that?
Joshua Marx adds mystery and intrigue to this ever-more-complicated
case; and his portrayal as the straight-and-narrow, by-the-books boss is
disturbing and delightful at the same time.
Rounding out the exceptional cast is Jennifer Vega as
Lourdes, a recent “graduate” of the foster-child program whom Caroline has developed
a special relationship through the years.
She is who Caroline hopes all her Luna Gales will some day become. But as appreciative as Lourdes is of all that
Caroline has done and still is doing for her as she heads to community college,
there is something unsaid in those sad eyes that keep diverting to the ground
as her answers are more and more vague to Caroline’s questions.
The overload of all the Caroline’s of the foster care world
is illustrated vividly in the scenic design of Kate Boyd. Labeled boxes that surely contain thousands
of pages of case notes and court pronouncements are the bricks of Caroline’s
office walls and are even the foundation on which the raised stage sits. The costumes of Callie Floor clearly
highlight the personal characteristics of each person -- from the uptight-upstart
of a boss Cliff to the too-pleasant-to-be-believed Pastor James to the
organized-to-a-‘t’ Caroline.
The lighting of Kurt Landisman plays a major role in the
production’s storytelling as four-cornered outlines appears as stark shadows on
the floor and walls, giving the distinct flavor that Caroline is feeling more
and more boxed in and trapped by the cases that fill her day. Spots zoom in to at just the right moment to
put individuals into the witness box or to remind us that the baby is what this
whole story is really about at its core.
Kudos goes to Mr. Landisman for one of the best lighting designs of this
theatrical season.
Under the flawless direction of Tom Ross, this cast grabs
the audience and never lets us go until the final, silent moment where the fate
of Luna Gale finally becomes clear.
Aurora Theatre Company has hit a homerun in presenting Rebecca Gilman’s
timely and important play. Luna Gale teaches more than entertains,
leaving us with a new-found empathy for the complicated, over-loaded role of a
social worker in today’s foster childcare universe. Even more, Luna Gale reminds us that at the heart of every one of those ninety
cases is a precious child just wanting to be loved in a safe, caring home.
Rating: 5 E
Luna Gale continues
through October 1, 2017 at Aurora Theatre Company, 2018 Addison Street, Berkeley. Tickets are available online at https://auroratheatre.org/ or by calling the box office at
510-843-4822.
Photos by David Allen
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