Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

NAVIGATING ROUGH WATERS OF HIGH SCHOOL FRIENDSHIP

Besties’ relationsh­ip is put to the ultimate test in splendid ‘Chlorine Sky’ at Steppenwol­f

- BY CATEY SULLIVAN For the Sun-Times

Best-friend relationsh­ips can be fraught, especially if those involved suddenly find their interests painfully diverging. And rarely do the stakes of such ruptures seem higher than they do in high school. Set in and around a high school, what’s at risk is raw, apparent and relatable no matter your age in Steppenwol­f Theatre’s worldpremi­ere adaptation of “Chlorine Sky.”

Directed by Ericka Ratcliff, Mahogany L. Browne’s young adult novel in verse explores the evolution of a friendship between two teenage girls. The production delivers dramatical­ly and — in a number of thrilling basketball sequences — athletical­ly.

The coming-of-age story involves a snare of bad boyfriends, sibling fights and toxic gossip. Over the course of a taut 90 minutes, Browne has Sky (Akili Ni Mali) and her best friend Lay Li (Destini Huston) navigate colorism, sexual assault and addiction as well as their changing relationsh­ip. It’s a lot, but it never rings less than true, and the dramatic tension rarely flags.

Mali’s Sky is at the heart of the story. She’s a natural athlete and a young woman more comfortabl­e in well-worn basketball shorts than designer anything, far more at ease on the court or in the swimming pool than anywhere else. Mali displays the grace and power of a natural athlete and the awkwardnes­s of a teenager who is unsure away from the field of play.

There’s a moment when Sky realizes Lay Li is always looking through — not at — her. The crestfalle­n ache in her eyes is wrenching, and it’s one of many that capture the confusion, hurt and rage that Sky contends with whenever she’s not shooting hoops or under water.

In contrast, Huston’s Lay Li is vapid and unwittingl­y tragic as the friend who dumps you for a random boy or a more popular girl. At least, that’s who Lay Li seems initially. Huston brings what’s needed to make Lay Li’s selfishnes­s believable while eventually peeling back layers that throw all of her shallow obsessions into a different light and render her empathetic.

On or off the court, the supporting cast is seamless. Alexis Ward makes Sky’s older, undeniably cool and unfailingl­y punctual cousin Inga a beacon of supportive wisdom, delivering pep talks that should be on TikTok. When she disarms Sky’s insecuriti­es, it’s with joyful conviction.

If Inga’s the person you always want in your corner, Sky’s older sister Essa (Tiffany Renee Johnson) is the sibling whose cruelty leaves wounds. Johnson has a fanged, subtle sneer that makes it clear these barbs are meant to scar.

‘CHLORINE SKY’ ★★★½

When: Through March 11

Where: Steppenwol­f Theatre for Young Adults in the Steppenwol­f Downstairs

Theatre, 1650 N. Halsted St.

Tickets: $5-$30

Run time: 90 minutes, no intermissi­on

Info: steppenwol­f.org

In less than ideal double-casting, Samuel B. Jackson takes on two male roles: Lay Li’s boyfriend Curtis and Sky’s boyfriend Clifton. Between them, Clifton and Curtis embody all manner of noxious traits, jealousy and possessive­ness figuring graphicall­y among them. Clifton is all terrible game and faux chivalry. Curtis’ attentiven­ess is believably addictive. Jackson makes the menace and the foolishnes­s evident in both.

The cast is rounded out by Demetra Dee as Kiyana, a student whose kindness to Sky makes Lay Li and Essa’s cruelties seem all the harsher. She also executes a key move in one of the drama’s most giddily empowering and gratifying scenes. I can’t divulge it without spoilers, but suffice to say it involves a ninja-type operation in a mall food court and a whole lot of pretzel cheese, chaos and joy.

The production soars during movement scenes choreograp­hed by Joey Stone. At one point, the whole cast is on stage dribbling and passing, half a dozen or so basketball­s flying among the ensemble with a precision that underscore­s the bonds among the characters. When Sky squares off against a bruising array of opponents, she generates the energy of a whole pep rally.

Yeaji Kim’s scenic and projection design smoothly transforms from swimming pool to basketball court, a bright color palette making the stage pop like gel-pen doodles. The environmen­t is completed by lighting directors Conchita Avitia and K Story. There’s no water on stage, but, when Sky sinks into the pool, her world transforms into one of watery ripples nonetheles­s.

“Chlorine Sky” is beloved as a novel. Its fans — and those who have never read it — will find much to love at Steppenwol­f.

 ?? MICHAEL BROSILOW ?? Samuel B. Jackson (from left), Akili Ni Mali, Tiffany Renee Johnson, Destini Huston and Demetra Dee star in Steppenwol­f Theatre’s world-premiere adaptation of “Chlorine Sky.”
MICHAEL BROSILOW Samuel B. Jackson (from left), Akili Ni Mali, Tiffany Renee Johnson, Destini Huston and Demetra Dee star in Steppenwol­f Theatre’s world-premiere adaptation of “Chlorine Sky.”

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