In my teens I lived for
two years with an Italian family in Brooklyn, and this delightful play made me
feel right at home again. Not that family secrets and bitter confrontations
didn’t happen in my own Irish environment, but the style was different.
This perceptive
dramedy explores how one group deals with their secret shames when a young
priest, the apple of his mother’s eye and the respected confidant of his
father, returns home for a visit that lifts the lid off too many long-suppressed
secrets.
Playwright-director Tony
Blake explores how we each have the right to speak and be heard, but are we
willing to risk the consequences.
One character’s ironic, “The truth shall
set you free!” is soon demonstrated to be perhaps the greatest hurt of all.
Once known we can never go back, and the final revelation shows how the truth
can actually be a dagger in one’s heart. But, as Blake makes clear, it must
finally be spoken.
As the matriarch, Sharron
Shayne is a gentle spirit who one and all want to protect; and as paterfamilias
John Combs is a blustering dad who believes family always comes first no matter
the consequences. James Tabeek, as their Son the Priest, demonstrates the
conflict between protection, the truth, and standing on principle.
Also excellent are Michele
Schultz as the fierce maiden aunt; Kevin Linehan as the bossy older brother;
Meghan Lloyd as the plaintive sister-in-law, and Dennis Hadley as the jovial
but hurting cousin. You have to see the play yourself, since to describe the
amusing, if sometimes tragic conflicts, would give it all away. Go and discover
it.
The impressive set by
Jeff G. Rank, and eclectic costumes by Michéle Young, pull you into this
realistic Bronx-family world. Produced by David Hunt Stafford for Theatre 40.
At the Reuben Cordova Theatre, 241 S. Moreno Drive, Beverly Hills.
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