The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

‘Social Security’ a real laughing matter

- By Bonnie Goldberg

Ernest Ackerman, a retired motorman from Cleveland, Ohio, became the first person ever to receive a check, on Aug. 16, 1935 for Social Security.

He was lucky enough to retire one day after the Social Security program began, and received a check for a whopping 17 cents. Today, millions of Americans rely on this monthly check to live on, for food, rent and sundries.

One of those women is Sophie Greengrass, who is fortunate enough to live with her daughter, Trudy, and her accountant husband, Martin on Long Island. She also is lucky enough to have another daughter, Barbara, and her successful art gallery-owning husband, David, who are more than willing to write a check for mama’s care and comfort… as long as she doesn’t invade their luxurious Manhattan apartment and disturb their lovely life style.

The Connecticu­t Cabaret Theatre in Berlin is inviting you to get up close and personal with these families, as critical issues are discussed and radical changes are being made, weekends until Saturday, Sept. 22 when Andrew Bergman’s frantic family comedy “Social Security” comes to call. The Avon Lady or the Fuller Brush Man would have been more welcomed.

With an ominous phone call that there is “something to discuss,” sophistica­ted

art gallery owners David (Chris Brooks) and Barbara Kahn (Rachel West-Balling) have the disconcert­ing sense that their smooth, witty, and well ordered lives are about to irrevocabl­y change.

How different they are from the Mineola, Long Island branch, her uptight sister Trudy (Carleigh Cappetta Schultz) and her staid accountant husband Martin (Tony Galli) who are content to be suburbanit­es, happily overprotec­ting their daughter Sarah and care taking of mama Sophie (Lori Feldman) at the same time.

So what could be so urgent as to make the stay-athome Heymans leave their secure nest and venture into the big, bad Big Apple? The couple are the epitome of the “sandwich generation.” Not only do they have to handle all the capricious whims of Sophie, who is hard of hearing, leaves half eaten sour balls everywhere — like in

the toaster — and needs be catered to; they also have to contend with their only daughter, Sarah, who seems to be off to college and becoming sexually active in a menage-a-trois off campus.

What are concerned parents to do? Dump Sophie in Manhattan and fly to Buffalo to rescue Sarah, of course. The plan goes quickly awry when Barbara and David’s best artist client Maurice Koenig (Russell Fish) comes to dinner and meets Sophie in the flesh.

Come discover what half eaten sour balls and gefilte fish have to do with the price of art and sanity when Sophie Greengrass invades Manhattan.

For tickets ($34) call the CT Cabaret Theatre, 31-33 Webster Square Road, Berlin at 860-829-1248 or online at www.ctcabaret.com. Performanc­es are Friday and Saturday nights at 8 p.m., with doors opening at 7:15 p.m. Bring your own goodies or plan to buy treats at the concession stand onsite.

 ?? Connecticu­t Cabaret Theatre / Contribute­d photo ?? Russell Fish, Lori Feldman, Chris Brooks, and Rachel West Balling star in Connecticu­t Cabaret Theatre’s production of “Social Security.”
Connecticu­t Cabaret Theatre / Contribute­d photo Russell Fish, Lori Feldman, Chris Brooks, and Rachel West Balling star in Connecticu­t Cabaret Theatre’s production of “Social Security.”

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