TOM TITUS -- Theater Review
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Psychiatry, and some people’s desperate dependence on it, has been
examined by writers from Christopher Durang to Woody Allen, usually in a
highly comical, satirical vein.
When John Guare took on the topic 20 years ago in his play “Bosoms
and Neglect” -- which South Coast Repertory pounced on almost immediately
-- he brought it one step further. It’s still uproariously funny, but
this is quite definitely a black comedy, eliciting laughter and shudders
simultaneously.
SCR has brought Guare’s frenzied tale of three certified nut cases
back to its Second Stage for a production amplified by stunning set
design and lighting effects -- not to mention a trio of superlative
performances in what must be one of the most physically demanding
projects each has tackled.
The satiric static electricity crackles throughout. Director David
Chambers stirs this roiling kettle of emotional broth vigorously. His
cast responds with the physical and emotional bloodletting that is both
required and demanded for this sort of a play to succeed as well as it
does.
The early focus is on two thirtyish people, Scooper and Deirdre, who
share a common psychiatrist -- and who are both excessively bummed out
when the shrink takes a vacation. They turn to each other for what
amounts to a free session of therapy -- if one doesn’t count the scars it
leaves, both real and psychological.
While the specter of Scooper’s blind, aging, cancer-ridden mother
hovers over the scene, the pair compare notes and engage in some
intellectual one-upmanship of a high literary quality. In a beautifully
bizarre touch by scenic designer Darcy Scanlin, Deirdre’s apartment is
sheer white -- as are the hundreds of books therein, unsoiled by anything
as mundane as titles on their jackets.
Tim Choate delivers a raging, white-knuckled performance as Scooper,
whose strange name is explained late in the play. His anguish is fueled
not only by his analyst’s absence but by his guilt over the condition of
his mother, whom he wishes dead, and his affair with a buddy’s wife,
which is crumbling around him.
He meets his psychotic match in Cindy Katz as Deirdre, a book addict
with a five-session-a-week habit at the shrink’s. Katz revels in her
stunning intellectual and sensual persona, but she’s armed and dangerous,
a stimulating and wildly passionate woman. It’s the finest SCR work yet
from this familiar actress.
Completing the strange picture is Lynn Milgrim as Scooper’s
octogenarian mom, who’s stranger than either of the other two, warding
off cancer with a statue of St. Jude -- a scene Guare reportedly based on
his own mother’s oddness. Milgrim’s Henny is a fringe character in the
first act but comes well into her own in the second, punctuated by an
extended monologue that closes the play.
Scanlin’s scenic designs perfectly match the psychological brashness
of Guare’s story, abetted splendidly by Shigeru Yaji’s costumes and York
Kennedy’s lighting effects. The all-white apartment, with its Dali-esque
arrangement of books, is a master scenic stroke.
“Bosoms and Neglect” is a theatrical rant but a highly comic one, and
a razor-sharp sendup of psychiatry to rival Christopher Durang’s “Beyond
Therapy.”
Like “A Delicate Balance” on the main stage, it’s an intellectual
banquet.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
FYI
WHAT: “Bosoms and Neglect”
WHERE: Second Stage of South Coast Repertory, 655 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa
WHEN: 7:45 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday, with matinees at 2 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday
COST: $26-$47
CALL: (714) 798-5555
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