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Who's Afraid of Vino Veritas?
Virginia Woolf with drugs
The premise makes it sound more gimmicky than it is. Two staid
suburban couples, on a dare, drink some sort of hallucinogenic
truth-inducing "wine" made from Peruvian tree frogs. Vino
Veritas, which continues its world premiere run at the Purple Rose
through Saturday, March 8, and was written by David MacGregor (also
author of The Late Great Henry Boyle), begins on this clunky note,
and the premise is harder to swallow than the wine. The pretty
glowing blue liquid looks more like the happy hour special at the
local martini bar than frog slurry cooked up by a Carlos Castañeda
wannabe, and it seems to go down pretty easily. But putting a
bottle of tequila on the table is a simpler, more time-honored
setup.
The other unnecessarily flamboyant touch is that the four
characters drinking the "wine" are wearing Halloween
costumes (because it's Halloween), which serve as sandwich
boards announcing the carefully constructed outer shells that the
strange drink dissolves. The costuming is only mildly and momentarily
distracting, but it's as if the playwright doesn't trust
his own material. The press photos, featuring a cowboy wrestling
with Queen Elizabeth, suggest more Felliniesque merriment than
actually occurs.
Once you get past that, Vino Veritas is a truly well-constructed
and believable play about marriage and middle age, and about the
things that people, as a matter of survival, avoid talking about:
a kind of Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? on drugs. Compared
to Albee's George and Martha, MacGregor's first couple are
more obviously on the verge of divorce. You know them. Maybe you
are them: the bitter, angry, but deliciously fraught Lauren (Suzi
Regan) and the happy numbskull Phil (Phil Powers). He's looking
forward to an evening of beer and pizza puffs with the neighbors,
and she tensely delivers the news that it will be quinoa with
camarones and clam broth. She says it with such shrill desperation
that there's a kind of group stomach clench out in the audience.
The neighbors are a more complacent couple, a doctor and his
cheerful, nurturing wife, but as the evening unfolds, their complacency
turns out to be the only thing they share. The four psyches unfurl
in surprising ways, and, more surprising, playwright MacGregor seems
to know what to do with these forces once they're unleashed.
It is far more satisfying than the tree frog wine and odd costumes
would suggest.
Sally Mitani
[Review published March 2008]
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