AISLE SAY New York

SUNDAY

by Jack Thorne
Directed and Choreographed by Lee Sumnday Evans
Atlantic Theatre

Reviewed by David Spencer

October 2019

Jack Thorne is a pretty good storyteller; and more than that, he‚Äôs pretty good at keeping a story moving forward, letting relationships and characterization emerge via action. Which is why his latest, Sunday, at the Atlantic, is such a curiosity. It's a "gathering" play without much story at all, whose main characters are a group of young NYC people in their twenties and early thirties, their declared reason for getting together at the apartment of Marie (Sadie Scott) being as members of a book discussion group; but of course the books in question trigger other more existential discussions. Marie is kind of lost and lonely, but too defended to show it; and a lot more resentful of her sometime lover's (Juliana Canfield) boorish fiancé Milo (Zane Pais) than she's willing to let on. (For some of these characters, bisexuality seems to be a matter-of-fact existence.) There‚Äôs shy, literally bookish Keith (Christian Strange), and surly intellectual Alice (Ruby Frankel), who is also, for some reason, the play's step-out-of-the-action omniscient narrator. And there's downstairs neighbor Bill (Maurice Jones), who, when the others are not there, functions as a present-day reimagining of the Gentleman Caller.

With some equally curious dance punctuating the proceedings (devised by director-choreographer Lee Sunday Evans), that is sometimes real and in the moment cutting loose, and sometimes a kind of abstracted commentary, Sunday is a portrait of today's disaffected youth that seems…rather like a portrait of yesterday's disaffected youth. It has some contemporary indicia, but it seems a little quaint, and its thematic theme murky. All done well enough to be a pleasant enough sit-through; but seeming like the work of a very much younger and more callow writer than Thorne is.

As I say, curious…


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