The play takes place during one alcohol laced rehearsal. A downtown NYC
garage band is on the edge of breaking-up as the lead singer and his boyfriend
(also in the band) are, er, breaking-up. With each year that passes that they
aren't rock stars the incessant pull of adulthood becomes harder to ignore. With
more axes to grind than grinding the ax is it even worth staying together?
All of the actor’s play their own instruments and all of the musicians act
their own lines in this high-octane rock drama guaranteed to remind you that
you, too, could have been a famous rocker, if only …
Written by Grant James Varjas. Directed by Randal Myler.
Cast:
Preston Clarke, Ken Forman, John B. Good, Amanda Gruss, Grant James Varjas
Sets - Paul Smithyman
Lighting - Brian Nason
Sound - Eric Stahlhammer
Music Director - Keith Levenson
33 To Nothing is a terrific, tough little musical in the vein of
Tick, Tick...Boom or Hedwig and the Angry Inch. Grant
James Varjas has written the taut, aggressive book and composed the
intense alt-rock score both to sensational effect (additional credit on
two of the songs is given to bandmates/cast members Preston Clark and
John Good). Even the location of the newly renovated, eco-friendly
theater, Wild Project, at
East 3rd. St. & Ave. B adds to its street credibility.
Ostensibly
about a rehearsal by a garage band for an upcoming gig, this play with
music is really about the breakup of a relationship which will cause (by
the play's end) the break up of the band itself. Gray (Mr. Varjas in a
bravado performance) is the lead singer and songwriter for the group. He
recently has broken up with Bri (Preston Clarke) who plays lead guitar
in the band. He is also dealing with the recent death of his mother and
his nascent alcoholism. All the songs that the band is rehearsing are
about the soured relationship and their naked autobiographical pitch
causes the rest of the band discomfort. This is especially true for the
sympathetic Tyler (John Good) who is Gray's longtime best friend and
who's wife Alex (Amanda Gruss) is also in the band. In his alcoholic,
self-absorption, Gray has missed the fact that everyone else is
beginning to move on to more adult pursuits. Tyler and Alex want to
start a family while Bri has tentatively entered a new relationship.
Only Barry, the drummer (a hilarious Ken Forman) although henpecked
still wants the life of a "roadie".
Despite the tensions of both 'breakups', there is a wonderfully relaxed
feel among the players enhancing the experience of a "real" band (all
the actors play their own instruments to exhilarating effect). There is
also a genuine caring expressed for Gray's emotional problems by the
actors especially Bri. Even Ms. Gruss who is laden with playing the
'heavy' shows sufficient concern for Gray's breakdown. There is also a
humorous interlude about gay rock stars (both closeted and not).
As tight as the book and the performances are, it's really the music and
lyrics that the send the show soaring. Mr. Vargas' sensational lyrics
are just tart enough to sting but are passionate enough to move (even
though Tyler attacks Gray with the accusation "Nobody pays attention to
lyrics, anymore!"). In describing the failure of his relationship in
"Too Late Now", Gray sings that "you needed more than my silence while I
thrived on the emotional violence" and on "28 Bars" he sings "take
another Dramamine; it's just another pill for the drama queen". The rock
score/rehearsal format provides the concert-like atmosphere of stopping
the action while actually continuing it; credit director Randal Myler
for the smooth transitions throughout. 33 To Nothing is an
ambitious, powerful and ultimately moving new work.