Intriguing Love Song hums two tunes

Heart heist
By CAROLYN CLAY  |  August 19, 2011

LoveSong
GOOD DEAL The Orfeo Group actors (Gabriel Kuttner, Liz Hayes, Daniel Berger-Jones) play John Kolvenbach’s piece to its sometimes over-the-top, risk-taking hilt. 

Comedy and metaphor collide in the plays of John Kolvenbach. Fabuloso, in which wacky guests invade the home of a complacent married couple, seems a harmless sitcom until you realize that the onslaught of the visitors, in a swirl of enlivening chaos, is a stand-in for having a baby. The 2006 Love Song, to which Orfeo Group is giving a bristling Boston premiere (at Charlestown Working Theater through August 27), also fields a catalytic intruder who is not what she seems. Molly is an angry, aggressive burglar who breaks into the apartment of a nowhere man named Beane, then sticks around to berate him for having nothing to steal but a spare pair of pants and his heart — both of which she unapologetically makes her own.

Meanwhile, at the other end of a long, narrow playing space with the audience on both sides, Beane's business-clad, Bordeaux-swilling razor blade of a sister, Joan, spars with her husband, Harry, in modern digs as different from Beane's bare room — with its rickety beach chair and a threatening floor lamp — as she is from her mentally ill brother.

Not that Joan and Harry are uncaring: early on, Harry enthusiastically subjects the introverted Beane to a diagnostic personality test. And the subject responds to the first question with such an amusing mix of morbidity and literalism that you long to hear him answer a few more inane interrogatives. Really, the guy is such a sad sack that you hate to laugh at him (though you will, as would Jesus or even the kindest of social workers). Then Beane goes home to his darkened lair, encounters Molly, and is transformed from a nebbish who lacks the courage to want things to a man who cannot get enough — of sex or sandwiches or the exuberant song of himself. Moreover, his liberated, logorrheic embrace of fantasy and appetite trickles down to Harry and Joan, into whose uptight lives hedonism and whimsy worm their way.

But the threads of comedy and metaphor are not terribly well wound in Love Song. The softening, even flaking, of Joan, touchingly conveyed by Liz Hayes, helps tighten the skein. And much of the play — particularly the scenes in which Joan and Harry loosen up, smoking imaginary cigarettes and confessing to sexual arousal by cantaloupe — is funny in a refreshingly quirky way. But then it falls to Beane and Molly to trace the trajectory of their somewhat cannibalistic love across a desolate landscape of "discarded gum" and body fluids. These earnest, incantatory exchanges can seem melodramatic, even a bit clichéd. And when the big revelation about the couple manifests itself — though it illuminates the play's message about abandoning fear and literalism to connect to the crazy business of life — it's not much of a surprise.

1  |  2  |   next >
Related: Intriguing Love Song hums two tunes, Review: Harbor Light's lyrical, poignant Love Song, Zeitgeist skips through Tony Kushner's short plays, More more >
  Topics: Theater , Theatre, John Kolvenbach, Charlestown Working Theater,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY CAROLYN CLAY
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   ARTSEMERSON'S METAMORPHOSIS  |  February 28, 2013
    Gisli Örn Garðarsson’s Gregor Samsa is the best-looking bug you will ever see — more likely to give you goosebumps than make your skin crawl.
  •   CLEARING THE AIR WITH STRONG LUNGS AT NEW REP  |  February 27, 2013
    Lungs may not take your breath away, but it's an intelligent juggernaut of a comedy about sex, trust, and just how many people ought to be allowed to blow carbon into Earth's moribund atmosphere.
  •   MORMONS, MURDERERS, AND MARINERS: 10 THEATER SENSATIONS COMING TO BOSTON STAGES THIS SPRING  |  February 28, 2013
    Mitt Romney did his Mormon mission in France. But there are no baguettes or croissants to dip into the lukewarm proselytizing of bumbling elders Price and Cunningham, two young men sent by the Church of Latter-day Saints to convert the unfaithful of a Ugandan backwater in The Book of Mormon .
  •   THE HUMAN STAIN: LIFE AND DEATH IN MIDDLETOWN  |  February 22, 2013
    The New York Times dubbed Will Eno a “Samuel Beckett for the Jon Stewart generation.”
  •   ZEITGEIST STAGE COMPANY'S LIFE OF RILEY  |  February 22, 2013
    Sir Alan Ayckbourn has written more than 70 plays, most of which turn on an intricate trick of chronology or geography.

 See all articles by: CAROLYN CLAY