In a seedy Vegas
motel a young thug, Wally, fresh out of LA Trade Tech, and possible parole, is
waiting to break his 26th B-day cherry. His elder roommate, Larry, is all about
the $50-G'z his mobster boss is paying him to rub out a certain cocktail
waitress turned prostitute. After Larry reveals the plan, and promises
something special to his impatient delinquent, Wally splits open the stagnant
air with his own version of Elvis Presley's “Jail House Rock.”
Wanting to have
sex with his first victim, Wally becomes sexually and emotionally excited when
beautiful Audrey saunters onto the stage. Now a high class call gal she is all
about style and sex but, after she breaks into a song about her lives misery, Wally
falls hard and invites her to run away to Canada with him. After that, events smolder
like a cigarette about to start a blaze because if he doesn’t kill Audrey he
will himself become the selected victim.
As Alfred Hitchcock
would never give away the ending, I'll follow suit. The title comes from the
Elvis Presley hit song about Las Vegas and the suggestion that it takes place
in Vegas was there but I didn't feel it. There were no signs of Elvis on black
velvet décor, or blaring neon lights from a window, no busy local street life
or a siren or two - little things that could afford this dynamic play an air of
authenticity.
They say great
actors are hard to come by but “Bright Light City” brings three of them to this
stage with Garrett Michael Langston as young Wally, Leon Russom as merciless
Larry, and Heidi James as victim Audrey.
This is the world premiere of Nate Rufus Edelman's dark comedy, that he also co-directed with Angie Scott, and it is produced by Los
Angeles Theatre Center.
At LATC, 514 S.
Spring St., Downtown Los Angeles, through June 29. For tickets: (866) 811-4111
or www.thelatc.org.
Photos by Ed Krieger.