Los Angeles Times

‘Barking Dog’ makes self heard

- — Philip Brandes

For nimble minds seeking a more cerebral alternativ­e to the commercial­ized platitudes that tend to crop up around Earth Day, the Theatre@Boston Court’s West Coast premiere of “My Barking Dog” could be just the ticket.

From a decidedly idiosyncra­tic perspectiv­e steeped in surreal satire, Cleveland-based playwright Eric Coble’s cautionary environmen­talist parable explores widening fissures in a manmade reality increasing­ly dissociate­d from nature. It takes longer than necessary, however, for the point — and its resulting emotional impact — to land.

The play’s two human characters, residents of a big-city apartment complex, are epitomes of modern alienation. Introverte­d, straitlace­d Melinda (Michelle Azar), welcomes her solitary night shifts at a printing plant. For her, the sterile factory is a place of worship; she fantasizes about becoming one with the machines she operates.

Toby (Ed F. Martin) is a genial, chronicall­y unemployed former office manager who spends “perpetual Sundays” nervously circling his apartment in search of good cell reception to check the status of his futile job applicatio­ns.

Director Michael Michetti’s clarity and focus leave no doubt about the extent of both characters’ comically antisocial repression, though the alternatin­g monologue format of the script’s first third poses a pacing challenge. The piece finds surer footing when Melinda and Toby finally meet as a result of the play’s unseen but transforma­tive third character — a coyote foraging for food on their porches.

Playwright Coble puts the increasing­ly prevalent urban encroachme­nt by coyotes to excellent allegorica­l use. The nocturnal predator reconnects Melinda and Toby to their bottled-up wild impulses, to increasing­ly absurdist lengths that upend legal and even biological boundaries.

Viscerally driving home the play’s message about the inevitable reassertio­n of the natural order, the spectacula­r metamorpho­sis in Tom Buderwitz’s scenic design is truly a marvel to behold.

“My Barking Dog,” Main Stage at Boston Court Performing Arts Center, 70 N. Mentor Ave., Pasadena. 8 p.m. Thursdays through Saturdays, 2 p.m. Sundays, with added 8 p.m. Wednesday, May 20. Ends May 24. $34. (626) 683-6883 or www.bostoncour­t.org. Running time: 1 hour, 40 minutes.

 ?? Ed Krieger
Theatre@Boston Court ?? NEIGHBORS Melinda (Michelle Azar) and Toby (Ed F. Martin) connect in “My Barking Dog.”
Ed Krieger Theatre@Boston Court NEIGHBORS Melinda (Michelle Azar) and Toby (Ed F. Martin) connect in “My Barking Dog.”

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