"BEYOND THERAPY"
By Christopher Durang
Directed By Marisa Pisano
Critiqued by Rob Curran
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Starring Ben Grimes, Elissa Linares,
Bryan Schneider, Brionne Davis,
Natalie George and Shawn Friesen.
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Beyond Therapy: Painfully Complex
Dougherty Arts Center,
through September 21
Running Time: 2 hrs
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By billing it as a "neurotic" comedy, Naughty Austin Theatre Company seems
to position Beyond Therapy in the Woody Allen movie genre. This production
would best compare to the filmmaker's late career efforts -- one of the recent
offerings that he seemingly wrote during a spare hour in a psychiatrist's
waiting room. Excepting a few spry Allenisms like "I'm not ready for exercise yet,"
most of the dialogue limps so badly that cast members appear visibly impressed
whenever someone actually trots out their lines intact.
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Ben Grimes plays Bruce, a bisexual who keeps lying about himself in personal ads
to please his wacky therapist. Elissa Linares plays Prudence, a single woman
answering ads to escape her pervy therapist. After a couple of sour dates in
"The Restaurant," Bruce and Prudence get all mushy. News of the tryst incurs
the jealousy of Bruce's lover, Bob (Bryan Schneider), and Prudence's therapist,
Stuart (Brionne Davis).
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Grimes and Linares provide the best reason to tune into this talky affair -- what
their characters lack in likeability, they make up for in believability. "No one is just
one thing," says Bruce to Prudence in the first act. It's the last thought the play
provokes.
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Elsewhere, Davis has some good punchlines as Stuart, the macho therapist.
But the character of Stuart is as two-dimensional as the ponderous belt buckle
he wears to compensate for his hastened passion. Even Bryan Schneider, a
deft comic, pitches Bob's singing routine a few octaves above the humor range
in a low whine.
xxxThe elusiveness of waiters becomes a recurring gag in the restaurant scenes.
As the waiter, Shawn Friesen brings some long-awaited mirth when he finally
arrives. Director Marisa Pisano did an excellent job of the stage design, changing
location using only four moveable chairs and a couple of desks. "This place looks
just like the Restaurant," says Prudence when she sees Bruce's apartment, "and
it looks just like my therapist's office."
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Pisano wants the audience to embrace Bruce's psychiatrist, scatterbrained
Charlotte (Natalie George). George's high-pitched antics may ring a bell with
Dougherty Arts Center regulars. For the second time in two years, a shrill character
forces Ken and Barbie to dry hump on this stage -- and I am traumatized.
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A gifted bunch of artists, Naughty Austin and Marisa Pisano can find a script with
more crunch without going all the way to the Big Apple. Jersey-born playwright
Christopher Durang cannot decide if he finds pop psychology laughable or gospel.
Unable to beat them, Durang joins the people who James Thurber desribed as"
the heavy writers [who] had got sex down and were breaking its arm."
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