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A CurtainUp Review Everything Will Be Different By Jenny Sandman
Charlotte's mother recently died. Her father has withdrawn and she has only one close friend (who may just be imaginary). Lacking all but the most rudimentary social skills, Charlotte makes all the wrong choices in her quest for intimacy. She consequently ends up alienating everyone around her thus deepening her isolation and frustration. Those who say high school is the best time of your life are clearly delusional. Like most teenage girls Charlotte wants to be beautiful, sexy, famous, and admired. She is convinced that she's ugly and sees this as the source of her problems as a lack of beauty. This leads to a fixation on Helen of Troy. The idea of beauty and desire's power becomes tangled with her own version of that story which will fulfill her wish to revenge herself against everyone who doesn't notice her and to become famous and desirable. In her newly concocted personaas a porn star she will lavish affection and indiscriminate sexual favors on the boys around her (Jason Jurman as the nerd Franklin and Reynaldo Valentin as Freddie, the beautiful, insensitive jock). Her best friend Heather (Naomi Aborn), who is popular and pretty, supports Charlotte's quest. But as fantasy begins to overtake reality, she starts stalking her guidance counselor (Geoffrey Nauffts) and Freddie the jock. Unfortunately her father (Christopher McCann) is so wrapped up in his grief he cannot reach out to his daughter. Good as Schultz's play is, it would fragment without a strong actress in the main role and careful director. Fortunately he has both. A revelatory Laura Heisler perfectly captures the sturm und drang of fifteen-year-old misfits in a performance that is heartbreaking in its honesty. She holds the production together with the other characters largely ancillary. Daniel Aukin's direction is exemplary as always. He has a sense for the intricacies of human relationships. The pain at the heart of this play is kept in sharp relief, as Aukin moves the story through each of Charlotte's failures. Everything Will Be Different is brutal in its unflinching portrayal of Charlotte's burgeoning sexuality and her accompanying emotional immaturity. Her desperate quest for prettiness and fulfillment is the stuff of every teen movie ever made, but Schultz's taut scenes repudiate the glib teenage clichés. His writing is brisk, and the play's sometimes unclear relationship to reality heightens the inherent tension. He's given us a poignant if unsettling play that's well worth the distressing emotional journey.
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Easy-on-the budget super gift for yourself and your musical loving friends. Tons of gorgeous pictures. Retold by Tina Packer of Shakespeare & Co. Click image to buy. Our Review At This Theater Leonard Maltin's 2005 Movie Guide Ridiculous!The Theatrical Life & Times of Charles Ludlam 6, 500 Comparative Phrases including 800 Shakespearean Metaphors by CurtainUp's editor. Click image to buy. Go here for details and larger image. |