Surviving Hard Times


Neil Simon’s "Brighton Beach Memoirs," comes from a kinder, gentler playwright, one less harsh, less dark about love and marriage and human beings than the fellow who wrote "Sweet Charity," say, or "Plaza Suite." This is Simon with a wobbly kind of soft spot for adolescence, and New York, and family and growing up Jewish.

But that growing up Jewish has its dark side, too. It’s suffused with self mockery, cultural isolation, bitterness and, of course, a mother. Kate (M.J. Hartell) cleans constantly (it’s genetic. Her Russian grandmother swept the house clean just as a pogrom rushed her out of it), makes spaghetti sauce with ketchup, cooks liver to death and persists in serving lima beans with dreadful gastric consequences for our hero and narrator, Eugene Morris Jerome (Ben Grinberg).

Eugene is 15. He wants to pitch for the Yankees — although he figures that will be hard for someone named Eugene. He should be a Joey or a Frankie. He also wants to see his cousin Nora (Keilly Gillen McQuail), who lives with Eugene, his brother, their parents, his mother’s sister and her two offspring, one of them being the nubile Nora, naked. Almost as much as he wants to see Nora naked he wants privacy, which is hard to come by in this cramped Brooklyn apartment, a place with exhausted upholstery, antimacassars, a head shot of Claudette Colbert for the stage-struck Nora in the girls’ room and a screen door stage right allowing people to blow in and out of this otherwise hermetic world.

The family is right on the edge. Eugene’s dad, Jack (Joe Harding), needs two jobs to keep (terrible) food on the table. Kate’s widowed sister, Blanche (Susan Abrams), is swamped by helplessness and Hitler is entering Poland, an event that threatens the lives of relatives.

Things go from fractious to devastating as old grievances and new horrors surface. And though the audience laughs at the jokes, the jokes are not funny so much as reflexive, a means of getting on to the next moment. Staying alive. Taking another breath. This is no comedy.

But "Brighton Beach Memoirs" is pretty entertaining, even though the playwright’s wheels run hard, and the plot concatenates in a false way. Some of the actors, though, get us over these jarring places, particularly Harding, who knows how to underdo it, and Abrams, who creeps up on her role and surprises us all.

 


"Brighton Beach Memoirs" plays at TheatreWorks in New Milford through May 26. For tickets, call

860-350-6863.

Latest News

Robert J. Pallone

NORFOLK — Robert J. Pallone, 69, of Perkins St. passed away April 12, 2024, at St. Vincent Medical Center. He was a loving, eccentric CPA. He was kind and compassionate. If you ever needed anything, Bob would be right there. He touched many lives and even saved one.

Bob was born Feb. 5, 1955 in Torrington, the son of the late Joesph and Elizabeth Pallone.

Keep ReadingShow less
The artistic life of Joelle Sander

"Flowers" by the late artist and writer Joelle Sander.

Cornwall Library

The Cornwall Library unveiled its latest art exhibition, “Live It Up!,” showcasing the work of the late West Cornwall resident Joelle Sander on Saturday, April 13. The twenty works on canvas on display were curated in partnership with the library with the help of her son, Jason Sander, from the collection of paintings she left behind to him. Clearly enamored with nature in all its seasons, Sander, who split time between her home in New York City and her country house in Litchfield County, took inspiration from the distinctive white bark trunks of the area’s many birch trees, the swirling snow of Connecticut’s wintery woods, and even the scenic view of the Audubon in Sharon. The sole painting to depict fauna is a melancholy near-abstract outline of a cow, rootless in a miasma haze of plum and Persian blue paint. Her most prominently displayed painting, “Flowers,” effectively builds up layers of paint so that her flurry of petals takes on a three-dimensional texture in their rough application, reminiscent of another Cornwall artist, Don Bracken.

Keep ReadingShow less
A Seder to savor in Sheffield

Rabbi Zach Fredman

Zivar Amrami

On April 23, Race Brook Lodge in Sheffield will host “Feast of Mystics,” a Passover Seder that promises to provide ecstasy for the senses.

“’The Feast of Mystics’ was a title we used for events back when I was running The New Shul,” said Rabbi Zach Fredman of his time at the independent creative community in the West Village in New York City.

Keep ReadingShow less