Regional Reviews: San Francisco/North Bay Luna Gale Also see Richard's reviews of An American in Paris, How I Learned to Drive and Back from Iraq and Patrick's reviews of Luna Gale, Ain't Too ProudThe Life and Times of The Temptations and Rumors
Caroline is the polar opposite of Karlie: her choices are always wise, or at the least, prudent. In this instance, her decision to recommend Karlie's mother Cindy (Laura Jane Bailey) be given temporary custody seems easily the best option. Cindy has a good job as a nurse, access to day care, and is active in her church. But once Caroline gets to know her a little bit better, that choice seems significantly less wise. Unfortunately for Luna Gale, there are no better options. Playwright Gilman has constructed an almost brutalist architectural edifice of a story, with human livesinnocent and not socaught up in a bureaucracy with the entrapping qualities of quicksand. It's human instinct to care for an infant, so when Mama's tweaking on meth and Daddy's crashing, and she's offering him a handful of Skittles saying, "you need to eat," we're worried about the babyand this hooks us into the story. A brilliant story, which takes many unexpected turns, but never lost my attention. As jaded social worker Caroline, Jamie Jones is marvelous. She brings a business-like attitude to pretty much everything she does. Jones reveals a woman who has worked relentlessly for decades with the intention of being of help to humanityonly to come to her last years before retirement to see even her best efforts bring tragic results. It's a combination of careworn and caring that Jones wears almost regally. The set by Kate Boyd is composed to a large extent of file boxes, prefiguring a descent down the corridors of bureaucracy. Arrayed mostly as a wall upstage, the boxes serve to remind us that the tragic (but somewhat hopeful) tale of Luna Gale is but one of thousands upon thousands of similar stories of children at risk. Luna Gale deals with challenging subject matter, to be sure. What choice do you make when none of the options are good? But with such an engaging, thrilling production, getting yourself to the Aurora before this closes would be a wise choice indeed. Luna Gale runs through October 1, 2017, at the Aurora Theatre Company, 2081 Addison Street, Berkeley CA. Shows are Tuesdays and Wednesday at 7:00 p.m., Thursdays-Saturdays at 8:00 p.m., and Sundays at 2:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m. Tickets are $33-$65. Tickets and additional information are available at www.auroratheatre.org or by calling 510-843-4822. |