A Fishing Story, Kinda

Yes. Zara Spook is a lure, for catching bass. It’s plump and white, and it skitters, drawing fish to the surface, just the way love and fame and a thirst for revenge do in Joan Ackermann’s “Zara Spook and Other Lures.” It’s also about women competing in the great Bass Classic in Truth or Consequences, NM. Really. Ackermann’s people are peculiar and dear, even Mel (Thom Whaley) who unleashes his shotgun repeatedly at Ramona (Ariel Bock), his wife and a champion angler on her way to New Mexico. “Love is hard to get over,” Ramona says, explaining Mel’s behavior. “Hate is harder.” Ramona, a capable independent person who keeps fishing worms in her bra, is a hero to Evelyn (Julie Webster), a newcomer to angling, setting out to win fame in bass circles. The two take off on the 2,000-mile drive with another fisherwoman Teale (Stephanie Hedges), resting up from asthma and competition. And Evelyn’s boyfriend, Talmadge (Ryan Marchione), comes along too, because he worries about lightning on lakes: one fellow got killed that way. Another, Ramona says, got castrated. Also, Talmadge, and everybody else it seems, knows something Evelyn does not. She’s pregnant. This is an early play of Ackermann’s, written after her story for Sports Illustrated about women’s bass fishing fell through. So she took her notes and quotes and turned them into this play. Ackermann loves these characters, even Margery (Deann Halper), an indulged urbanite whose husband’s work she describes as “having affairs with younger women.” She’s after a little risk. Out in the wild, though, she crumbles. There are no galleries, no jewelry shops. “Just a vast amount of vastness.” This is a perfect play for Mixed Company, a group Ackermann and Gillian Seidl started 30 years ago in a one-time grain depot off Rosseter Street in Great Barrington. The play space, still outfitted with stovepipe lights and rickety chairs (easy to move around from one production to the next) puts actors and the people who watch them very close together. So there’s no hiding here, no faltering. It would show. And it does not. What does show is a huge commitment to acting, to good plays and to Ackermann, an inventive writer and director who seems to know a thing or two about lures in life, and who sees to the heart of every one of the people she writes about. “Zara Spook and Other Lures” plays at Mixed Company, 37 Rosseter St., Great Barrington, through April 28. For reservations, call 413-528-2320.

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Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.