Los Angeles Times

Thou shalt not spy on teen girls ...

Do so at your own peril, as one pastor discovers in the funny, creepy ‘Man of God.’

- CHARLES McNULTY THEATER CRITIC

Every good comedy has a human engine, and in Anna Moench’s funny, creepy and unflinchin­gly observed “Man of God,” that engine is Mimi, played with powderkeg force by Sandy Nguyen.

Mimi is one of four Korean American high school girls from Southern California traveling with their pastor on a religious mission to Bangkok, Thailand. The most openly rebellious of the group, she not only breaks commandmen­ts but also defiantly pours out a stream of curses when she’s called out for taking the Lord’s name in vain, leaving her companions ducking for cover.

The play, receiving its world premiere in an East West Players production at the David Henry Hwang Theatre at the Union Center of the Arts, begins with an alarming discovery inside the girls’ generic hotel room. A secret camera has been found in their bathroom, the kind of device that could have been livestream­ing the girls as they toweled themselves off, sat on the toilet or vomited into the bowl.

Everyone is shriekingl­y upset, but Mimi seems close to nuclear meltdown. She wants to know whether this is some kind of “sex freak Thai thing” and demands they comb the room for more cameras.

Should they have their pastor contact authoritie­s? Jen (Michele Selene Ang of “13 Reasons Why”), the overachiev­er who’d rather talk about law or medical school than cosmetics, doubts that plan would do any good. Samantha (SunHee Seo), whose naivety knows no bounds, can’t understand why the police wouldn’t jump to their rescue.

“This is the place weird German sex fiends come to diddle little boys dressed as little girls,” Mimi explains in her usual bulldozing way.

Kyung-Hwa (Katherine Ko), who strenuousl­y maintains a perfect front but is unable to hide her insecuriti­es or eating disorder from her friends, decides to phone the pastor. Consternat­ion intensifie­s when the call goes to voicemail. Where could their guardian be? “Probably out evangelizi­ng,” Samantha guilelessl­y offers.

All hell breaks loose when the girls discover that the camera is the property of their New Seoul Christian Church. Could the Man of God chaperonin­g them be a sex maniac?

Moench’s play darts from comedy to thriller without ever losing its sense of humor. Suspense builds, but

the plot is secondary to what the interplay among the teens reveals about the ubiquity of sexual violence and female exploitati­on in the world.

“Man of God” examines the way these harsh gender realities are internaliz­ed by the characters, who are still only “minors,” as Samantha anxiously reminds everyone. The play is at its best in understand­ing adolescent minds through banter that freely mixes the serious with the frivolous, much like “The Wolves,” Sarah DeLappe’s critically acclaimed play about a girls’ soccer team that’s having its West Coast premiere next month courtesy of Echo Theater Company.

The production, directed by Jesca Prudencio, balances the unruly (and often hilarious) jousting with introspect­ive glimpses of fragile and still gestating inner lives. The staging is less assured when it transition­s into scenes in which each character’s revenge fantasy plays out.

The fight direction by Andy Lowe that animates Samantha’s samurai knife display is lively fun. But such surreal moments aren’t seamlessly woven into the fabric of the writing or the staging. (The set design and lighting magnify the awkwardnes­s with dislocatin­g effects that leave us nowhere.)

Roy Vongtama’s Pastor, who flashes in and out of these sequences, makes a dashing impression when he finally comes knocking at the girls’ door. This is no dried-up cleric but a heartthrob manipulato­r. His menace is slippery, perhaps too much so. Neither his character nor his role in the play is fully fleshed out.

Although tensely gripping, “Man of God” seems unfinished. After depicting the wildest imaginings of her female characters, Moench opts for subtlety in the final moments. The psychology is incisive, but the brisk play is underwritt­en. It’s not a question of length but of sustained focus on what matters most. A delicate recalibrat­ion is all that’s needed for what is already a potent work.

The female cast members find the hidden depths that Moench bestows on the characters. Seo’s Samantha turns out to have surprising grit and ferocity; Ang shades Jen’s strength with profound somberness; Ko’s Kyung-Hwa may just be the most complex of the group (for reasons too troubling to give away); and Nguyen’s fierce Mimi, who has a knack for bringing situations to an immediate boil, might not be the terror she seems.

Don’t underestim­ate these adolescent girls making their way in a predatory world. “Man of God” reveals what they’re up against while honoring the resiliency their survival depends on.

 ?? Michael Lamont ?? MICHELE SELENE ANG, left, Sandy Nguyen, SunHee Seo and Katherine Ko star in the world premiere production of “Man of God.”
Michael Lamont MICHELE SELENE ANG, left, Sandy Nguyen, SunHee Seo and Katherine Ko star in the world premiere production of “Man of God.”

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