Steve
Mark Gerrard
Greg Ayers, Clove Galilee, Joey Alvarado, Shawnj West & Daniel Redmond |
Five long-term friends – two gay couples and their mutual
lesbian BFF, Carrie – are meeting for drinks to celebrate Steven’s
birthday. Steven arrives in a grouchy
mood, snapping with a snarl every time his partner of sixteen years opens his
mouth and calling loudly for a drink from a waiter that does not come. But when the Argentinian sometimes-dancer,
now-waiter Esteban does arrive, something clicks between them (noticed by all)
– all just before Steven then discovers that on his partner’s (Stephen) phone
are dozens of sexy, seductive messages to and from Brian, the partner of Matt
-- both of whom are sitting right there nervously witnessing the volcanic
eruptions that the Birthday Boy now emits.
Vaho, Greg Ayers & Clove Galilee |
And thus opens what is actually a comedy that is also packed
with much mid-life drama in a somewhat amusing outing entitled Steve by Mark Gerrard, now playing at
New Conservatory Theatre Center. The
four men act out their mid-life transition issues in varying degrees of
desperation and exploration from the aforementioned sexting (Stephen and Brian)
to inviting a hot-trainer to move in as a three-some (Brian and Matt) to having
an occasional affair with a waiter who seems somehow to show up everywhere
Steven finds himself. And parallel to
all these shenanigans where forty-something ‘men’ are trying to prove to
themselves they are still sexually desirable to younger ‘boys’ actually
sexually desirable, their best friend Carrie is dying before their eyes.
With that set-up and the further complications that the
coupled pair both named a version of Steve also have a young, somewhat unruly
son Zachary (whom we never meet), Mark Gerrard’s script certainly has many
opportunities for including caddy, snippy, snarky lines that gay men and their
lesbian friend can do so particularly well.
But the playwright goes further to juice up the script by including
dozens of references in lines spoken, sung, and heard as background music to Broadway
musicals, both recent and long ago. For die-hard
theatre-geeks, the play becomes a scavenger hunt with the goal to find and identify
all the references. For those of us who
are mere mortals, the additions fly by so fast that many occur unnoticed, or at
least leave us unsure why included.
The situations and script of the play are mildly
entertaining in and of themselves, with occasional moments of true comedy and
others of genuine heart. But under the
direction of Becca Wolff, some of the funniest scenes are those where her
genius and that of projection designer Sarah Phykitt elevate the here-and-there
laughs into outright hilarity.
One such scene is brilliantly constructed and is in many
ways the highlight of the evening. Steven
stands in the middle of his apartment devilishly sexting with Brian while also dutifully
texting with Carrie (who is quite ill in the next room but also with his
birthday-boy son, both waiting for promised ice cream) and frantically texting
(with no replies) to hubby Stephen (who is actually ‘sex-ing’ with Esteban
rather than getting the ice cream). At
the same time, Steven is conferencing on two lines to both his mother and
mother-in-law, who then also talk to each other. As we listen to and watch Steven’s mixed
reactions of sexual intrigue, spousal irritation, concern for sick friend and
disappointed son, and feigned interest in what his two mothers are saying to
him and to each other, we also watch the ongoing texts on the panels of three
IPhones projected around the apartment.
The sequence is nothing short of hysterical.
Joey Alvarado & Greg Ayers |
Greg Ayers is the Steven with a ‘v’ and probably the ‘Steve’
of the play’s title. He is often a
fountain of over-flowing emotions and outbursts as he experiences both his
partner and his best female friend suddenly fading from his life. At the same time, he himself is
unapologetically on the make, falling prey to the tempting teases of a handsome
Argentinian (Esteban, played with accented sweetness and sexiness by Vaho). The huge swings in his reactions and moods
are impressive, but frankly his inconsistencies of character also make it
difficult to find much empathy for him.
However, in a dream sequence where he says his good-byes to Connie, the script,
director, and actors (including Clove Galilee as Carrie) join forces to create
a scene truly powerful.
Greg Ayers & Clove Galilee |
Ms. Galilee herself is not only the evening’s only female on
stage but also the best, most believable performance among this cast of
six. Her Carrie is a loyal-to-the-core
friend who is not afraid to call b.s.
She matches tit-for-tat the wit of her gay friends with her own saucy,
sassy comebacks; but with her, there is less intent on insulting or hurting
with the pokes she might make. Her
approach to the cancer eating away at her health is noble and credible, enough
so to break our hearts as well as those of her friends. Among this group of otherwise questionable
sorts, she is the one thing that leads all of them to rise above their own
self-interests and sexual drives in order also to find something noble in
themselves.
Rounding out the cast are Joey Alvarado as the other
Stephen, whose motives for his continued sexting with Brian (even after being
caught) are never made clear in the script; Daniel Redmond as a
British-accented, easy-going Matt; and ShawnJ West as Brian, whose one-dimensional
personality is stuck on sexual innuendos and flirtations.
Randy Wong-Westbrooke has created an ingenuous, intriguing
set design where two roving walls consist of cock-eyed, mixed-shaped compartments
with the accruements of the mid-life folks we meet. The cut-outs in the walls become a pallet for
the excellent lighting inventions of Brittany Mellerson, who also creates a
sound design that among other things, provides many of the snippets of the
Great American musicals that serve as accompaniment to scenes and scene
changes. Jorge R. Hernández populates
the set with props that help change seasons and scenes as well as fill the
many-shaped compartments on the turning walls.
His costumes go a long way explaining the differences among the quirky
characters we meet and to set apart Connie as one who is facing her cancer with
dignity.
New Conservatory Theatre Center’s production of Steve is overall enjoyable and certainly
well-produced. In the end, Mark
Gerrard’s concept, characters, and script are nothing to write home about or remember
beyond a few days, but they do provide enough ammunition for Director Becca
Wolff to find plenty of ways to entertain us for ninety minutes.
Rating: 3 E
Steve continues
through March 31, 2019 in the Decker Theatre of the New Conservatory Theatre
Center, 25 Van Ness Avenue
at Market Street, San Francisco. Tickets
are available online at http://www.nctcsf.org or by calling the box office at
415-861-8972.
Photos
by Lois Tema
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