Regional Reviews: Washington, D.C. An Act of God Also see Susan's review of The Lover and The Collection
An Act of God, David Javerbaum's breezy comedy, brings God into the compact ARK Theatre in the person of beloved Washington actor and seven-time Helen Hayes Award nominee Tom Story. The supreme being loves theater, he explains, and he wants to take this opportunity to release a revised version of the Ten Commandments that will eliminate any ambiguity about what he wants. Now, even God needs some help now and then, and that's where archangels Michael (Evan Casey) and Gabriel (Jamie Smithson) come in. Michael is basically an eternal office boy, doing whatever the Big Guy wants and chatting up audience membersand occasionally getting a divine smackdownwhile Gabriel provides trenchant quotes from the Bible. Robert Croghan has costumed all three of them in tasteful white suits with gold accoutrements. Story has just the right attitude for all this: world-weary, exasperated at the shortcomings of his creations (maybe he should have spent more than six days creating them, he muses), and happy to let people know he always has a reason for what he does. Whether it's always a good reason is another question. God as envisioned by Javerbaum, derived from the playwright's Twitter account @TheTweetOfGod, admits he has anger management problems and says awe and panic are his two favorite human emotionsbut he, not they, should cause them. He tells audience members not to kill in his name, pointing out that he has no trouble smiting those he doesn't like and doesn't want to help. (Amusingly, a pesky fly bedeviled Story at one point on press night, suggesting the limits of God's omniscience.) Director Eleanor Holdridge uses a light touch as she lays out Javerbaum's 75-minute sketch (the playwright has 13 Emmy Awards as a writer on "The Daily Show") on Daniel Conway's just-this-side-of-kitschy set with its marble columns, walls made of blue sky and clouds, porthole windows trimmed with scrollwork, and rococo white loveseat. The tone is over-the-top satiric but not hostile. Among other things, God makes clear that the Bible is not infallibly true, offering an alternative description of life in the Garden of Eden, unexpected humor in the story of Cain and Abel, and some inside information about Noah's ark.
Signature Theatre |