The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Review: ‘What Do We Need to Talk About?’

- By Bob Goepfert

TROY, N.Y. » One of my greatest adjustment­s during this forced-stay-at-home period is transition­ing from live theater to streaming production­s.

I am happy — no, thrilled — to say I have experience­d a production online that was not only incredibly satisfying, but so good that it gives me hope that excellent playwright­s will find a way to conquer an impersonal delivery system.

Certainly, Richard Nelson has done just that with the play “What Do We Need to Talk About?” It is produced by The Public Theater in New York City and is available on their website and their YouTube channel free of charge through June 28.

This is a piece that dramatical­ly sets itself above most all the others I’ve experience­d digitally. Appropriat­ely, this work was written specifical­ly to be performed on Zoom or any of the other streaming platforms. It is a work that fits its environmen­t.

Another virtue is that the writing is superb and timely. Through this family of mostly older or middle age members we truly understand what it is like to live during a pandemic.

This is a play that expresses every fearful thought and insidious doubt that we all have had over the past few months. Yet, if not optimistic, the characters are rational about the situation. “What Do We Need to Talk About” is somber without being depressing and hopeful without being artificial.

It talks about isolation, the loss of friends, the absence of cultural opportunit­ies, the threat to the theatergoi­ng experience and the simple fear of going food shopping.

Because it is set in upstate NY, it addresses concerns of locals about citydwelle­rs moving to their rural community and has fun with political personalit­ies on a state and national level.

A story is told about how Franklin Pierce is regarded as our country’s most incompeten­t president. Murmurs and comments suggest the characters would relegate Pierce to the second most incompeten­t.

“What Do We Need to Talk About?” is a play about the Apple Family, who live in Rhinebeck, N.Y., as does playwright Nelson. If you follow the Public Theater, the characters might be familiar to you. Between 2010-2013, Nelson wrote and The Public produced four of his others plays using the same characters.

They were set at a dining room table and most of the same actors have played the characters. This attachment shows in the marvelous acting and Nelson’s minimalist direction

Barbara (Maryanne Plunkett) a woman in her mid60s, just got out of the hospital and is recovering from a severe case of Coronaviru­s. Living with her while she recuperate­s, is Richard, her 67-year old brother. He works in Albany, as a lawyer for Governor Andrew Cuomo. They share a Zoom screen as Richard dotes on his sister.

There is also Jane, (Sally Murphy) a younger sister, who lives with her boyfriend Tim (Stephen Kunken). Tim is a former actor, who now manages a restaurant in Rhinebeck. He has a minor case of the virus and he and Jane are quarantini­ng in separate rooms in Jane’s house.

The final face on the four unit screen is the sophistica­ted sister Marion (Layla Robbins). She appears the most controlled of the clan, yet her onscreen reactions reveal the most about her feelings towards the others.

The individual­s are all honest and the relationsh­ips loving. These are good, smart people who are coping with living life in a void.

In years to come, if you want to explain to someone what it was like to live in 2020, this 70-minute Zoom production will paint a sad, but oddly hopeful picture of this moment in time.

In essence, this is a play about how communicat­ion is essential to overcoming depression and fear. Through Zoom, the characters find a way to connect with each other and feel better. It adds to the humanity of the characters and the situation.

That artists use the same technology to create a compelling storytelli­ng experience is as hopeful as it is gratifying.

“What Do We Need to Talk About?” is produced by the Public Theater and available at their website and YouTube channel, through June 28 and is free of charge.

 ?? THE PUBLIC THEATER PHOTO ?? Clockwise, from top left, Jay O. Sanders, Maryann Plunkett, Sally Murphy, Laila Robins, and Stephen Kunken in the livestream­ed world premiere of “What Do We Need To Talk About?”
THE PUBLIC THEATER PHOTO Clockwise, from top left, Jay O. Sanders, Maryann Plunkett, Sally Murphy, Laila Robins, and Stephen Kunken in the livestream­ed world premiere of “What Do We Need To Talk About?”

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