AISLE SAY New York

TRICK OR TREAT

by Jack Neary
Directed by Carol Dunne
Starring Gordon Clapp
59E59

Reviewed by David Spencer

2/4/2019
At 59E59, on Stage A, the full-size off-Broadway proscenium space, is Trick or Treat, by one of the regional mainstay brand names, Jack Neary. The release info describes it as a “dark comedy,” but it’s only sporadically funny, in part because its approach to the storytelling milieu of family drama is too foursquare to allow for the emotional distance created by absurdity or extremity. Not to suggest that it’s necessarily axiomatic for characters in dark comedy to be unsympathetic—but absent some permission to understand that we’re seeing a filtered reality, through the prism of a specific tone and what we sense will emerge as a thematic agenda (think Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead by Tom Stoppard, What the Butler Saw by Joe Orton, Glengarry Glen Ross by David Mamet, The Lyons by Nicky Silver, etc.), we settle in for something more familiarly domestic; and by the time we realize we’re supposed to be engaged with something other, (a) it’s too late; and (b) it still isn’t.

I usually very much dislike even top-of-the-plot spoilers, but just to give this context: Mr. Neary’s play is set on a contemporary Halloween. Late 60ish-early 70ish Johnny Moynihan (Gordon Clapp, as vigorously engaging a persona as he was playing N.Y.P.D Blues’ Greg Medavoy over 12 seasons that crossed over into the new millennium) is answering the door with candy for the kids as he awaits the arrival of his grown daughter. When Claire (Jenni Putney, the soul of Irish-American Eastern Massachusetts) finally arrives and Johnny practically browbeats her into just sitting down to listen before heading upstairs, he haltingly confesses that he has just used a pillow to suffocate his Alzheimer’s-ridden wife in her sleep, after a particularly harrowing episode that left him without hope. This is all done with such sincerity that you’re led to believe this will be the sensitive dramatization of a delicate situation.

It turns out to be something quite else, and it leaves you feeling cheated and a little bit lied to (however unintentionally) by the playwright, and a lot by several of the characters. By which I don’t mean that several of them aren’t keeping dark secrets (though they are, Johnny being among them); but that we are introduced to them in an emotional context that makes the plot revelation feel like a betrayal of our investment. (Anthony Shaffer’s thriller Sleuth is of course a very different sort of play, but it serves an an apt comparison, because in Act One, when mystery novelist Andrew Wyke reveals his more sinister hand to his offstage wife’s younger suitor, Milo Tindle, and in a mansion setting that is practically a museum of game-play and murder-mystery weaponry, it’s not a betrayal of the character we’ve met, it’s the other shoe dropping.) Add to this a script with many needlessly redundant beats and direction (Carol Dunne) whose blocking is sometimes chaotic, and whose sense of build doesn’t get much more nuanced than loud vs. soft.

All this said, Neary is a talented writer, and the cast (also including David Mason, Kathy McCafferty, and Kathy Manfre) is talented, so the experience is hardly dull or dishonorable. But it lacks the kind of cohesion of conception and execution that would make it gratifying.


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