South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

‘Rhapsody’

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Sarasota’s Florida Studio Theatre as a commission during the pandemic, but it its world premiere is underway at Zoetic Stage, a company of which he is a co-founder, and is staged by artistic director Stuart Meltzer. The play runs through Jan. 29 in the Carnival Studio Theater at Miami’s Arsht Center.

“American Rhapsody” — the “rhapsody” refers to an epic poem, not to a piece of music — is a play that weds the personal to impactful events and societal shifts.

It begins in 1969, as the Cabot family of Lawrence, Kansas, huddles around their television set to watch grainy video of

Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin landing on the moon. It ends in 2032, in a country forever evolving, an America and an extended family vastly changed.

“Sixty years is a lot of play,” says McKeever, who sports a T-shirt that reads “Write On” during a Zoom interview. “Stuart is keeping everything beautifull­y clear, so active and moving… Few people know my work better than Stuart; he knows my writing. He’s enormously insightful.”

That Meltzer connects so thoroughly with McKeever’s work is no surprise. Winners of multiple Carbonell Awards, Meltzer is also one of Zoetic’s five co-founders (Christophe­r DemosBrown, Stephanie Demos-Brown and Kerry C. Shiller are the others). Meltzer and McKeever have worked together on multiple Zoetic shows, including the company’s first, “South Beach Babylon,” in 2010 and written by McKeever. Together for two decades and married since 2017, the artists’ lives are creatively and personally enmeshed; it was during a cross-country driving vacation with Meltzer that McKeever hit on Kansas and its utter flatness as the location for “American Rhapsody.”

McKeever acknowledg­es the autobiogra­phical underpinni­ngs of his new play, though focal character Franky Cabot is a poet, not a playwright. Meltzer says that initially, the play was intended to be “a reexaminat­ion of the beaten-up American dream from a family’s perspectiv­e.”

As the script has evolved, the director says, “we’ve figured out a way to connect the milestones in one man’s life with the art of creation. You get family, events and the art of writing, all in one play.”

McKeever includes four generation­s of Cabots: patriarch Franklin “Papa Frank” Cabot (Steve Trovillion), a distinguis­hed jurist; his son “Big Frank” (Aloysius Gigl) and daughter-in-law Eleanor (Laura Turnbull); the couple’s offspring Jenny (Lindsey Corey) and Franky (Alex Weisman); and Jenny’s daughter Maddie (Stephanie Vazquez). Jenny’s husband Albert Bernal (Carlos Alayeto), family friend Nat Morris (Lela Elam) and six other characters also figure into the sweeping yet intimate story.

Weisman, who grew up in Davie and began acting in South Florida as a child, became an in-demand Chicago actor after graduating from Northweste­rn University, expanding his career to film, television (he plays the LGBTQ+ character Frank on “Sesame Street”) and Broadway (“Harry Potter and the Cursed Child”).

He has seen plenty of McKeever’s work and was part of a one-night Zoom reading of “Daniel’s Husband,” the writer’s play about gay marriage, from his New York apartment during the pandemic. When he read “American Rhapsody,” Weisman says, “I fell in love with it. It reminded me of Michael Cunningham’s ‘Flesh and Blood’ in its scope, its storytelli­ng, and the Americana in it.”

Weisman also relished the idea of originatin­g the complex role of Franky, “this queer figure who doesn’t have to be innocent and likable and funny all the time. He has allowed me to be flawed, even nasty. So many times when we play these characters, we have the shimmer of a halo around us. I appreciate how unhappy this character is.”

Weisman, now 35, says he has looked up to McKeever since he was 10, that the playwright was an influence in his decision to become an artist. Other than the pandemic reading of “Daniel’s Husband,” he hadn’t worked with the director on a full production, and he’s finding the experience different and exhilarati­ng.

“Stuart is incredibly impulsive. Every moment feels like you’re walking through an electrical field, and when you put it all together, it’s like fireworks,” the actor says. “I don’t work that way. I’m very in my head and go back to these cerebral impulses.”

Playing the Colombian-American Albert, Alayeto is also new to Zoetic, McKeever and Meltzer.

The son of Cuban parents who came to Miami in 1961, he is relishing being able to originate the role of a husband and father with post-traumatic stress disorder and, like his character, has a wife who travels for work, a daughter and a close relationsh­ip with his mother-in-law.

“It’s amazing how efficientl­y Michael goes through the history. It’s very much a family play that doesn’t get bogged down,” he observes. “I’m very impressed with his rhythm and the melody of his prose… Stuart is very, very specific. I’m amazed at his attention to detail… He provides solid anchor points to connect with, and nothing feels arbitrary.”

Corey, who plays Albert’s driven lawyer-wife Jenny, and Elam, whose black lesbian bartender character Nat becomes a close friend to several Cabots, are both members of Zoetic’s extended artistic family. Both have been in multiple production­s done by the company, and both find this McKeever play especially resonant.

“This play in particular is relatable to everyone: to people affected by 9/11, the feminist movement, the Black Lives Matter movement, the American experience, the female experience, the gay experience, the human experience,” says Corey. “The first time I read the play, I fell in love with Jenny. She has a ‘blue fire’ in her heart, like Papa Frank did. I also feel that fire in me.”

“American Rhapsody” is a memory play, a work of imaginatio­n grounded in McKeever’s experience­s and perception­s of the world. His Cabot family deals with loss and joy, tragedy and triumph, little decisions, and life-changing ones. The play is suffused with warmth and humor, as well as pain.

Alayeto believes that, even with the challenges the family and the country endure, the takeaway is a point of view that can benefit anyone.

“This paints a hopeful picture of America, which we sorely need. This is a country of optimism and hope. We can make this the land of the possible,” he says. “I think it’s a play audiences need.”

IF YOU GO

What: “American Rhapsody” by Michael McKeever

Where: Zoetic Stage, Carnival Studio Theater at the Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts, 1300 Biscayne Blvd., Miami

When: Through Jan. 29: 7:30 p.m. Thursday-Friday, 3 and 7:30 p.m. Saturday, 3 p.m. Sunday (no matinee Jan. 21) Cost: $55-$60

Informatio­n: 305-949-6722 or arshtcente­r.org

ArtburstMi­ami.com is a nonprofit source of dance, visual arts, music and performing arts news.

 ?? SUSAN STOCKER/SUN SENTINEL ?? Michael McKeever, an award-winning South Florida playwright for the past 30 years and cofounder of Miami’s Zoetic Stage, is debuting his 36th play,“American Rhapsody.”
SUSAN STOCKER/SUN SENTINEL Michael McKeever, an award-winning South Florida playwright for the past 30 years and cofounder of Miami’s Zoetic Stage, is debuting his 36th play,“American Rhapsody.”

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