{"id":67901,"date":"2023-09-25T13:30:04","date_gmt":"2023-09-25T13:30:04","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/celeband.com\/?p=67901"},"modified":"2023-09-25T13:30:04","modified_gmt":"2023-09-25T13:30:04","slug":"small-talk-gives-way-to-horror-at-curious-theatres-the-minutes","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/celeband.com\/lifestyle\/small-talk-gives-way-to-horror-at-curious-theatres-the-minutes\/","title":{"rendered":"Small talk gives way to horror at Curious Theatre’s “The Minutes”"},"content":{"rendered":"
On the civic-minded set of \u201cThe Minutes,\u201d things get very strange, even funny, before going downright dark. Tracy Letts’s Pulitzer Prize-nominated drama about a city council meeting gone awry launches the new season at the Curious Theatre Company with artistic aplomb and to roiling effect.<\/p>\n
Letts, the author of the family meltdown drama \u201cAugust: Osage County,\u201d brings his knack for the implosive to what should be a routine Big Cherry city council meeting — if only Mr. Peel (played with hapless decency by Josh Robinson) would stop asking about the absence of Mr. Carp (Erik Sandvold).<\/p>\n
New to the council, Peel has just returned from burying his mother. It\u2019s only natural for him to wonder, what did I miss? When he last saw Carp, the latter was talking about a cache of stolen bicycles that the brother of another council member had come into lucrative possession of.<\/p>\n
Carp\u2019s chair and nameplate sit at the end of a long table, but he\u2019s nowhere in sight. Why? Might a reading of the minutes of the council\u2019s prior meeting clarify things?<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
The nonreplies, evasions and push-back provide the first hint that something may be out of whack. Then there\u2019s the fact that from the play\u2019s outset, there have been the rumblings of a storm. (Sound designer Jason Ducat and lighting designer Richard Devin make deft work of wielding the theater\u2019s version of special effects.) Later, lightning will illuminate the stage. And this taut one act, which begins as one kind of play — a farce of governance perhaps \u2014 builds into something more sinister, troubling and rending.<\/p>\n
Still, things begin civil enough. The small talk between the colleagues, a mix of cordiality, disinterest or low-grade wariness, provides its own amusing dance. Mentions of Kiwanis pancake suppers, bridge gatherings and daughters\u2019 ages lend a neighborly vibe to the room.<\/p>\n
That atmosphere is mildly undercut by the triumvirate of Mayor Superba (Michael McNeill), Mr. Assalone (William Hahn) and Mr. Breeding (Michael Morgan). Gathered at one table, they look like a power throuple and behave like one as well. \u201cBreeding is the weathervane. Assalone is the junkyard dog,\u201d Mr. Blake (Cajardo Lindsey) tells Peel.<\/p>\n
With its mute expression of the solemn work of democracy, Markas Henry\u2019s evocative set provides a perfect counterpoint to what unfolds onstage. Early chatter gives way to peevish grievances, a doublespeak absurd enough to rival Abbott and Costello and one thoughtful bill likely not to see the light of day.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
Disrupting a meeting that has yet to hew to “Robert’s Rules of Order,” Ms. Innes (Kathryn Gray) asks to enter into the record a rambling statement about how sacred the Big Cherry Heritage Festival is to one and all.\u00a0It is after all a celebration of the battle that led to the founding of the town: a fight between an\u00a0unsuspecting\u00a0settler family, the soldiers billeted at their farmstead and the twenty-six “stealthy” Sioux warriors who set upon them.<\/p>\n
The citizenry of Big Cherry is not reflected on stage, apart from Ms. Johnson (Ilasiea Gray), the clerk who arranges the meeting room and keeps the minutes. \u201cThis is a closed session where we do the people\u2019s work,\u201d Mayor Superba says without irony.<\/p>\n
As Thomas Jefferson said rather unforgivingly, \u201cThe government you elect is the government you deserve.\u201d And Letts makes clear that although we the audience may feel superior to these clowns, they are elected representatives. Their foibles, misdeeds and worse are our own to an uncomfortable degree.<\/p>\n
Mr. Carp makes a riveting appearance late in the play, with portrayer Sandvold giving a rattling performance.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
The ability of the horror genre to take on the actual horror and outrages of systemic violence has become a rich conversation in literature and even more so in film. (Check out Tananarive Due\u2019s upcoming haint story, \u201cThe Reformatory,\u201d or revisit George A. Romero\u2019s \u201cNight of the Living Dead\u201d and Jordan Peele\u2019s \u201cGet Out.\u201d) Although theater is capable of things bumping in the night and jump scares, it seems to have ceded much of that ground to cinema laden with special effects.<\/p>\n
The founding of Big Cherry enters the play first as a comforting fable and then as a harrowing tragedy. The ability of the horror genre to address the outrages of systemic violence is a rich theme in literature and even more so in film, but not nearly enough in theater. It’s exciting that director Montour-Larson and her willing-and-so-able cast go there. With the playwright as a brilliant guide, they have carefully calibrated the demonic to maximum, damning effect.<\/p>\n
In \u201cThe Minutes,\u201d the path from farce to horror resembles the slow burn of the 1968 chiller \u201cRosemary\u2019s Baby,\u201d where so much of the demonic was introduced as harmless, neighborly even. Here, the innocuous or vacuous also hides a dastardly offense. To quote the Scottish play, in which Shakespeare made splendid use of the supernatural and the horror humans inflict, \u201cSomething wicked this way comes.\u201d Oh, there may be wickedness yet to come, but so much of it resides in an unreconciled past.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
Written by Tracy Letts. Directed by Christy Montour-Larson. Featuring Brian Landis Folkins, Ilasiea Gray, Kathryn Gray, William Hahn, Jim Hunt, Cajardo Lindsey, Michael McNeill, Michael Morgan, Josh Robinson, Erik Sandvold, and Karen Slack. At the Curious Theatre Company, 1080 Acoma St., through Oct. 14. curioustheatre.org or 303-623-0524.<\/p>\n
Subscribe to our weekly newsletter, In The Know, to get entertainment news sent straight to your inbox.<\/em><\/p>\n