SERVING THE ON-LINE RPI COMMUNITY SINCE 1994
SEARCH ARCHIVES
Current Issue: Volume 130, Number 1 July 14, 2009

Features


Talented acting highlight of disturbing play

Members of Alpha Psi Omega portray characters from Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolfe

Posted 09-19-2002 at 9:46PM

Jen Norton
Senior Reporter

Take four unpleasant people and put them together during the hours after closing time with enough alcohol to drown a small child and what do you get? Well, it’s hard to say exactly, but it’s definitely something that doesn’t have much at all to do with Virginia Woolfe.

Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolfe can be summed up in one word: dark. What starts off as a somewhat quirky evening quickly balloons into a tragic tale of woe filled with some of the most dysfunctional characters I’ve ever seen.

The actors portraying the characters, however, did a wonderful job, and none more so than John L. Gilson. All four actors came together to create very realistic interactions, but the script was like some strange hybrid between “The Twilight Zone” and “One Life to Live.”

Much like any soap opera, skeletons were popping out of closets all over the place. By the end of the play though, I was wishing that they all could have stayed where they were when it all began.

The plot basically involved a husband who was a professor at a university. Unfortunately, he had the poor sense to marry the daughter of the president of the university, a decision that caused him all sorts of difficulty. The relationship between these two characters can best be explained as an ongoing verbal sparring match.

A younger couple, who had just joined the university family, came over for drinks following a faculty party given by the president of the university. The entire late-night get-together revolved around the jibes the older couple kept taking at each other, with the occasionally painful attack on the young couple thrown in for good measure.

If there had been one somewhat decent, or at least sane, character in the tiny cast, I wonder if the play may have ended earlier. There seemed to be some unspoken rule about leaving in the middle of the hurtful games that ensued. As a result, the audience had to stay put for four hours, wondering if it would ever be over.

Otherwise, the sets weren’t anything extraordinary, but were passable. A few small details seemed to be missing, but the set did add to the atmosphere of the entire play.

If asked, I wouldn’t see this play for the plot or any exciting special effects. The acting was very good though. This definitely is not a light-hearted play for those looking to get a good laugh and forget life for a few hours. For those planning to see the show: This very well might be the most disturbing four hours of your week. Consider yourself warned.



Posted 09-19-2002 at 9:46PM
Copyright 2000-2006 The Polytechnic
Comments, questions? E-mail the Webmaster. Site design by Jason Golieb.