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a body of water

 

Who are we without our memories? Avis and Moss awake one morning in a house set in the forested hills above a picturesque body of water. The weather's great, the view's magnificent. However, neither of them seems to know whose house this is or who they are. Will a stranger at their doorstep be able to help? A haunting drama that explores the slippery nature of reality and conviction. Written by Lee Blessing and directed by Maria Mileaf.

 

Cast:

Michael Cristofer / Christine Lahti / Laura Odeh

 

Set Design - Neil Patel
Costume Design - Candice Donnelly
Lighting Design - Jeff Croiter
Sound Design - Bart Fasbender
Production Stage Management - Larry Ash

 

Review

 

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Ticketing and Show Information

Category Off-Off Broadway
Previews  
Presenter Primary Stages
Opening Oct 3, 2008
Closing Nov 16, 2008
Schedule Tues at 7pm / Wed - Sat at 8pm / Sat & Sun at 2pm
Theatre 59E59 St Theatres
Location 59 E 59 St  (Madison & Park Ave)
Price $60
Box Office

You can purchase tickets at the theatre office located in the main lobby of the theater at 59 East 59th St, (Madison and Park Ave)
Mon 12 - 6pm
Tues - Sat 12 - 8:30pm
Sun 12 - 7:30pm

Phone Ticket Central Box Office

416 W 42nd St (9th and 10th Ave)

 Open  daily 12 - 8pm

(212) 279 - 4200

Online http://www.ticketcentral.org/
Theatre is wheelchair accessible.

Theatre has radio assistive listening devices for the hearing impaired.

To purchase accessible seating, please call
Ginger Dzerk at (212) 753 - 5959 x106

Subway  N, R, W, to 5th Ave (exit at 60th St)
4, 5, 6 or N, R, W to Lexington Ave at 59th St
Bus
Review
A Body of Water
Primary Stages (59 E 59 Street Theaters)
October 11, 2008
Morgan Wycks
mwycks@nyconstage.org


As I exited the theatre where Lee Blessing's A Body of Water is playing, an audience member rather loudly proclaimed "I know a stinker when I see one." I have to say I was in total agreement with him since I too had to suffer the pretensions of this extremely labored piece. Frankly, if I, like the two main characters, Moss (Michael Cristofer) and Avis (Christine Lahti), woke up naked with a stranger in a strange place I might chalk it up to one too many Margaritas, but if I also like them had no idea who I was, I'd be quite a bit more panicked than they appear to be. Simply questioning it like addled philosophers pondering an ethics issue doesn't feel like the right response. Not until a third character, Wren (Laura Odeh), arrives do they get a little angry and heatedly perplexed. But even then that's because Wren plays them off each other with sadistic games. She is their nurse … no wait, their attorney for an alleged infanticide…. Oops, no, no … she's their daughter… or perhaps their daughter and attorney or maybe a think-tank intelligence agent. In any event, Wren is pretty much put out with this duo, as was I, but I was even more so with Wren for jerking everyone around, especially those of us in the audience.

Mr. Blessing seems to have no idea what he wants to do with the trap he's constructed, nor with the characters he's placed in it. More or less, it feels like anything that comes to his wandering mind. Therefore on Neil Patel's characterless silk-screened set, the actors cannot make particularly enlightened choices. Ms. Odeh's voice becomes strident with exasperation early on and stays there, while Mr. Cristofer is all fluttery tics and phoniness apparently impressed by his own performance. Only Ms. Lahti takes the situation at face value and is able to wring honest emotions out of it and bring to it a moving grace under pressure.

Ostensibly the play is about memory - what is remembered, how it's remembered and how memories change, disappear and are manipulated - which has been addressed frequently in dramatic literature. If you wish to read or see a more meaningful exploration of this theme I suggest Harold Pinter's Old Times. My feeling here is that the producers wanted to maintain their relationship with a writer who has demonstrated much better work in the past, but they really should examine what they've accepted before giving the go-ahead.

...end