An Entomologist’s Love
Story
Melissa Ross
Lucas Verbrugghe & Lori Prince |
Blink, blink. ... Blink, Blink.
Blink/Pause. ... Blink/Pause.
Signals go out into the night, searching for a compatible
mate -- for hot sex. The climax could be
even more ecstatic since the female may be one that kills the male as the deed
is done.
Such is the life of a firefly. Much the same happens to Praying Mantis males
on the prowl. One first-and-final fling
and then it is heads over heels into his mate’s mouth.
Betty is one of Fordham University’s hottest tickets as an
adjunct professor, interesting enough in describing and showing slides of bug
sex that her students actually look up from their IPhones to become
enthralled. Her own online prowls for
hook-ups via OKCupid and EHarmony are part of the constant chatter she directs
at fellow Museum of Natural History entomologist, Jeff -- a friend for twenty
years who once had a short sojourn as her bedmate and lover. Her own cynical, almost vicious views of the
men she finds online (and the fact she as a woman feels the necessity to act
dumber than they in order to keep them interested) is not that much unlike the
venom of the female insects she describes as they too devour their finds. But she also shows evident delight in
recounting her blow-by-blow (as in often below the belt) escapades to Jeff, all
the time encouraging the much shier, more reserved workmate to do the
same.
And so sets up the search for love among insects and these
two long-time, thirty-something pals and colleagues as the first scenes unfold
in the furiously funny and edgy An
Entomologist’s Love Story by Melissa Ross.
Currently in a first-class, visually
stunning world premiere by San Francisco Playhouse, An Entomologist’s Love Story is a ninety-minute whizz under the
watchful and creative eye of Giovanna Sardelli (who also directed the workshop
when the piece-in-progress first appeared at TheatreWorks Silicon Valley’s 2014
New Works Festival). The director has Jeff
and Betty often flying around their shared laboratory/office on rolling chairs
like insects in flight while sending out verbal stingers often meant to target
the other’s hot buttons that they have discovered in microscopically examining
and noting in memory notes each other’s foibles through the years. Theirs is a friendship deep but one where
there is still a question if those romps together in the past are really only
of the past. That question comes up
early in Ms. Ross’s snappy, sharp, and sexy script -- one that lingers
tauntingly in the air as the play quickly moves through its number of
delightful, laugh-inducing scenes.
Lori Prince |
Lori Prince in a constant whir of movement as Betty, rarely
able to stay perched in any one position long without jerking herself with renewed
vigor to focus on her prey (usually Jeff). Her sudden flight is often accompanied by her spewing
forth a new flurry of babble – a mixture of confessions, accusations, and
insinuations that are sometimes made with tongue-in-cheek and at other times
with the intention to sting enough to hurt.
Betty is clearly the star of her a story all about her, and she
insists that Jeff listen and be a part of her life’s unfolding as it is
happening (while still being coy if he starts probing too much about things she
had rather not admit – like a possible new boyfriend). But she also wants to know all the details of
Jeff’s life and better yet, to shape/alter them to her satisfaction when they
do not meet her approval – like his meeting and seeing a potential new
girlfriend. Lori Prince is perfectly
cast as the high-flung, ego-centered but highly insecure Betty, finding a
myriad of ways to display all of Betty’s complicated sides as one who is
thirty-five and still single, with eyes on the ticking time clock of life.
Lucas Verbrugghe |
Much different in many ways but yet still able to be aroused
by Betty into his own frantic frenzy of digs and denials is Jeff -- also
thirty-five but often regressing to his late teens. Lucas Verbrugghe is a Jeff who stumbles about
making wonderfully awkward, out-of-place remarks when trying too hard to make
good impressions while also moving in over-done ways like a boy whose hormones
are still in full rage and control. He
is by nature quiet and shy but can burst into bold and boisterous at any moment
in ways that look like he has just broken through his latest self-spun
cocoon. When with Betty, the two of them
are often anything but mid-thirties in their maturity, ready to play any minute
“hipster or homeless” while sitting on a bench in front of the museum. Together, too, they sometimes still send to
the other a signal of possible attraction -- leaving each to wonder if it is a
signal of compatibility or if it is a fatal warning.
Lucas Verbrugghe & Jessica Lynn Carroll |
Bugs lead each to discover a total stranger who may or may
not be on the right wavelength for a possible match. Bed bugs bring Jeff and Lindsay together, she
being the opposite of Betty in almost every dimension. Jessica Lynn Carroll brings a high, giggling
voice and a bubbling personality that leads Betty to greet her with, “Oh God,
you’re like a living, breathing Disney princess.”
Lori Prince & Will Springhorn Jr |
After landing together by chance on a Central Park bench,
Andy recognizes Betty as the lady who gives the bug lectures. (He sits in on her classes in between his
work hours as a part-time janitor at Fordham.)
As Andy, Will Springhorn Jr. is proud of who he is by profession and
attracted immediately to this woman who reminds him of “that guy on Sixty Minutes” – i.e., Andy Rooney. He has his own unique ways of moving in on a
reluctant Betty (who argues to Jeff, “He’s a janitor ... I have 500 degrees”),
but his self-arranged flowers arriving at the lab that look more like a jungle
do begin to catch her attention – even though she does all she can to deny to
herself and Jeff that is so.
Nina Ball and Jacqueline Scott have outdone themselves in creating
the sets and properties for this Playhouse fun time. Massive walls of shelves full of mounted and
bottled insects rise on each side of the stage, with the turntable soon
revealing an even more impressive back wall of framed specimens and over-sized
models of bugs and insects. Even the
polished wood desks, specimen drawers, and work table of this Natural History
Museum laboratory are stunning to behold -- all enhanced by Kurt Landisman’s
lighting design and the projections of Theodore J.H. Hulsker. A subtle buzzing noise can be heard in the
midst of music in Mr. Hulsker’s sound design (almost leading one to swat at
some imaginary fly-by). Brooke Jennings
completes this outstanding Creative Team, designing wardrobes that highlight
the four differing and unique personalities fluttering about before us.
The signals continue to flicker on and off among these four
would-be lovers, but nothing is certain in nature. There is a lot of chance and randomness. In the world of entomology, at some point the
right signals hopefully connect. In
Melissa Ross’ An Entomologist’s Love
Story, we wait and watch to see if the same is true in the complicated
world of humans. Her world premiere at
San Francisco Playhouse should cause quite the buzz among theatregoers in the
Bay Area who are looking for a stimulating, light-hearted, off-beat story of
maybe-yes, maybe-no romance.
Rating: 4.5 E
An Entomologist’s Love
Story continues through June 23, 2018 at San Francisco Playhouse, 450 Post Street. Tickets are available at http://sfplayhouse.org/ or by calling the box office at
415-677-9596.
Photos
by Jessica Palopoli.
No comments:
Post a Comment