Los Angeles Times

Cooking up a little drama

- — Margaret Gray

Busboys in “My Mañana” blend human compassion, desperate times.

The workplace, where so many of us spend so much time, offers a rich trove of subjects for playwright­s eager to move away from the dysfunctio­nal family. As “The Office” suggested on TV, even the most pedestrian employee break room can roil with enough intrigue and folly to make the House of Borgia look tame.

The trick is deciding how much actual work to include in a workplace drama. You want just enough detail to give the plot an authentic f lavor, but not so much that you inadverten­tly create a training demo.

Elizabeth Irwin’s “My Mañana Comes,” in its world premiere at the Fountain Theatre in Los Angeles, is set in the kitchen of an upscale Manhattan restaurant where four busboys rush about doing the repetitive and seemingly trivial tasks — f illing breadbaske­ts, slicing fruit, rolling silverware into napkins, garnishing entrees — for an unseen dining room.

Peter ( Lawrence Stallings) is the unofficial leader, an ambitious man with a young daughter at home and a passion for order. Peter has worked for years with the more reserved Jorge ( Richard Azurdia), who lives in extreme deprivatio­n, saving nearly every penny he earns to build his family a house back in Mexico.

Although Peter is fond of Jorge, he’s not above mocking him for his thrift, with the eager participat­ion of the cavalier, flippant Whalid ( Peter Pasco). And all three men make fun of Pepe ( Pablo Castelblan­co), the newest to cross the border, who is still wide- eyed and struggling with English.

Peter and Whalid are American citizens, Jorge and Pepe are not, but they are a team, working together like parts of a machine on Michael Navarro's jewel of a kitchen set. They’re engaging performers, and director Armando Molina choreograp­hs their dance with a chaotic harmony that, along with Irwin’s sharply observed banter, conveys a strong bond. They may trash- talk one another, but at the end of the day, they have each other’s backs.

At least until management starts cutting their pay.

Over the course of a sultry summer’s brunch and dinner shifts, tension builds — slowly, it must be said. At times all forward momentum seems to get lost in busboy business. The cast and crew have reproduced the atmosphere of a restaurant kitchen with meticulous care, but the audience may not always find the outcome so engrossing. ( Work is often boring.)

But when the plot f inally does kick in, with an abrupt, heartbreak­ing twist, the time we’ve spent getting to know these men pays off. The performanc­es turn what might otherwise seem a preachy and schematic problem play into a nuanced exploratio­n of the limits of human compassion in desperate times.

“My Mañana Comes,”

Fountain Theatre, 5060 Fountain Ave., Los Angeles. 8 p. m. Mondays, 3 and 8 p. m. Saturdays, 3 p. m. Sundays. Ends June 26. $ 15-$ 34.95. ( 323) 663- 1525, www.fountainth­eatre.com. Running time: 1 hour, 30 minutes.

 ?? Ed Krieger ?? PABLO Castelblan­co, Lawrence Stallings and Peter Pasco in “My Mañana Comes” at the Fountain Theatre.
Ed Krieger PABLO Castelblan­co, Lawrence Stallings and Peter Pasco in “My Mañana Comes” at the Fountain Theatre.
 ?? Darrett Sanders ?? CONNOR Kelly- Eiding, top, and Teagan Rose in Ruby Rae Spiegel's “Dry Land.”
Darrett Sanders CONNOR Kelly- Eiding, top, and Teagan Rose in Ruby Rae Spiegel's “Dry Land.”

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