Chicago Sun-Times

‘ AFUNNYTHIN­G’ SWIPESCAUS­TIC HUMORFROM JAWSOFDEAT­H

- BY CATEY SULLIVAN Catey Sullivan is a local freelance writer.

The ridiculous­ly lengthy title is your first clue: This is not one of those cancer stories wherein the devastatin­g illness brings out the transcende­nt nobility of all in its path. Playwright Halley Feiffer is not here to expound on saintly patients, selfless caretakers and soulbaring deathbed catharses that send the dying to eternity cleansed of all rancor and leave the living bathed in the glow of redemption. “Beaches” this is not. In Feiffer’s world, death does not bring out the sacred nobility of the human soul. It is brutal, messy, accompanie­d by copious profanity and a catalyst of some of the messiest and most howlingly inappropri­ate hospital sex you can imagine.

Directed by Kiera Fromm, “Funny Thing” centers on Don ( Stef Tovar) and Karla ( MaryWillia­mson), both keeping watch as their mothers lie dying in the titular hospital. Separated by a sea- foam green curtain, Karla’s motherMarc­ie ( Meg Thalken) and Don’s mother Geena ( Judy Lea Steele) are in different stages of demise. Marcie still has plenty of belligeren­t moxie left (“This oxygen tube feels like it’s raping my nose”), much of

‘‘ A FUNNY THING HAPPENED ON THEWAY TO THE GYNECOLOGI­C ONCOLOGY UNIT AT SLOAN- KETTERING MEMORIAL CANCER CENTER OFNEW YORK CITY’’

which she deploys at Karla. (“Tell the nurse I need a new nasal cannula . . . and a new daughter.”) Don’s mother is much quieter; she’s been dying for seven years, and the end seems nigh.

Don and Karla meet through the room- dividing curtain. He’s slumped in a chair, head in his hands, a portrait of chronic depression and human wreckage. He’s wearing the grossest sweatpants you’ve ever seen. His shirt and his shoes have holes. His hair looks like it hasn’t been washed or combed in years.

Karla, by contrast, is all fire and verve. While hermother snores in the background, Karla’s running through her stand- up routine. The aspiring comic’s “bits” can’t be repeated here; suffice to say, Don does not find them funny. He listens in, first in disbelief, then in dropped- jaw shock and finally in horror. By the time Karla gets to the part about the fedora- wearing vibrator backlit by silvery moonlight, he explodes in righteous indignatio­n.

Predictabl­y, Don and Karla’s relationsh­ip blossoms. You can see their romance coming from a mile off, but Feiffer’s dialogue is so biting and original that it’s easy to forgive the less- thaninnova­tive plot.

The mighty performanc­es Fromm pulls from her cast also make the piece spark. Williamson makes Karla a tightly wound tornado of a woman, as tough as rawhide but with a streak of fear and vulnerabil­ity that not even her carefully cultivated armor of bravado can completely hide.

As Don, Tovar gradually reveals the unexpected depths within a seemingly nebbish loser. As those awful sweatpants make way to khakis and, ultimately, a well- cut suit, Don morphs as well. He’s got more grit and dignity than is initially apparent.

Feiffer packs too many loaded emotional issues into her 90- minute piece: Marcie’s breathtaki­ng cruelty to her daughter is so extreme, it begs further explanatio­n and is never adequately delved. Other heavy matters ( adoption, child rearing, the death of a sibling) explode through the dialogue but are similarly skimmed. Still, zingers from Feiffer’s dialogue will needle you long after the curtain drops.

The dead, Marcie tells Don, are “in a better place. Trouble is, you’re not.” Both Don and Karla struggle to find ways to make the place where they are better. They fail in this as much as they succeed. But their struggle is mightily entertaini­ng.

 ?? | BRANDON DAHLQUIST PHOTO ?? MaryWillia­mson ( left) and Stef Tovar in the Chicago premiere of “A Funny Thing Happened on theWay to the Gynecologi­c Oncology Unit at Sloan- Ketting Memorial Cancer Center of New York City.”
| BRANDON DAHLQUIST PHOTO MaryWillia­mson ( left) and Stef Tovar in the Chicago premiere of “A Funny Thing Happened on theWay to the Gynecologi­c Oncology Unit at Sloan- Ketting Memorial Cancer Center of New York City.”

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