Los Angeles Times

Some bounce for the end times

The comedic ‘Apocalypse Play’ looks for love while dodging the cannibals.

- By F. Kathleen Foley calendar@latimes.com

When one is pondering the apocalypse, the word “sprightly” does not often come to mind.

Yet that descriptor certainly applies to Cory Hinkle’s “Apocalypse Play,” a thematical­ly slight but lively new comedy presented by Moving Arts at the Atwater Village Theatre.

Some kind of climatolog­ical cataclysm that commenced after an unspecifie­d war has killed all of humankind. Well, almost all. In the aftermath, pirates and roving gangs of cannibals scavenge for the few remaining survivors.

Jane (Megan Kathleen Duffy) and her exboyfrien­d, Chip (Nick Ballard), have managed to survive by hiding out in a camouflage­d apartment stocked with canned goods — a hidden haven that the couple secured only after Chip killed one of the neighbors.

A self-absorbed television actor, Chip sees their situation as a prime opportunit­y to repopulate the planet, but the people-hating Jane, who is quite enjoying this apocalypse, is happy to let the human race dwindle into extinction. The arrival of the cannibalis­tic Henry (Brandon Bales) — coincident­ally, Jane’s old beau from Brooklyn — adds fatal complicati­ons to an already charged scenario.

Hinkle’s unusually structured play suspends notions of chronology and reality as the characters — including River (Connor Kelly-Eiding), a dead visitant who has an unlikely flirtation with Henry — act out versions of what is and what might have been.

Hinkle’s piece artfully mingles the dire and the playful, a divide that director Darin Anthony confidentl­y straddles in his effervesce­nt, unflagging­ly wellpaced staging.

Among the excellent cast, Ballard is particular­ly effective as a handsome, delightful­ly dim egotist so accustomed to female adoration that Jane’s rejection boggles his meager mental powers. Sweetly yearning, he is a tender heart adrift in a rabid new world.

In the long run, the play’s claustroph­obic, entertaini­ngly random chatter may not stick in the mind. But in the short run, it’s a prime divertisse­ment that gleans ample amusement from civilizati­on’s wreckage.

 ?? Yaseer Khanani ?? BRANDON BALES, left, and Nick Ballard in “Apocalypse Play.”
Yaseer Khanani BRANDON BALES, left, and Nick Ballard in “Apocalypse Play.”

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