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Theater Shows
Graceland

The kindness of strangers.

centerstage reviewed this performanceReviewed by Centerstage!Go Chicago!

Venue:
Profiles Theatre
4147 N. Broadway St.
Chicago, IL 60613 Map This Place!Map it
Cost:
$25-$30
Tickets:
www.profilestheatre.org or (773) 549-1815

Author
Ellen Fairey

Styles

Related Info:
Official website

Performances
Runs May 28, 2009-December 20, 2009

Friday8 p.m.
Saturday8 p.m.
Sunday7 p.m.
Thursday8 p.m.

reviewed performanceCenterstage Show Review
Reviewer: Zev Valancy
Sunday May 31, 2009

A pair of troubled siblings with a turbulent past and present, their just-dead father, an aging ladies man and his teenaged son.

A tone that balances quirky humor and emotional outbursts, a plot that includes wild coincidence and honest revelations.

Funny lines, excellent acting and a nifty use of a tiny space.

Ellen Fairey's "Graceland" at Profiles Theatre is a world premiere, but it follows the stylistic formula of many contemporary plays. It's a very funny and extremely well-acted variation on the tragicomic contemporary character study, but it gets few points for originality.

Sara (Brenda Barrie) and Sam (Eric Burgher), have just lost their alcoholic father, and buried him in the title cemetery. Both are stuck in dead-end jobs and unsatisfying love lives. Encounters with Miles (Jackson Challinor) and his father Joe (Darrell W. Cox) complicate the plot and the emotional situation even more.

Fairey has created interesting characters, though they don't always behave in believable or consistent ways. She has an exceptional ear for the way people talk, and her dialogue is often hilarious. It's just that the plot and emotional arc are often predictable—shortly after a scene begins, it's pretty clear how it will end.

Still, there are many pleasures along the way. Director Matthew Miller has a sure way with Fairey's writing, and has guided the cast to strong work. They make the characters believable and engaging even when they are behaving in ways that make little sense. Challinor is particularly wonderful—he brings the melodrama and bizarre charm of adolescence to life in an utterly winning way. The fact that he is actually near Miles's age, rather than a young-looking twenty-something, is a major help.

Fairey has real playwriting talent, and has crafted a satisfying show. Let's just hope that next time she takes herself, and the audience, a little further outside the comfort zone.

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