The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

McCullers-inspired 7 Stages drama wavers

Certain aspects of the script feel unfocused.

- By Bert Osborne For the AJC

More well-meaning than especially meaningful, 7 Stages’ “FML: How Carson McCullers Saved My Life” clearly earns points for confrontin­g important topics such as teen bullying, sexual identity and the transforma­tive power of creative expression. But it loses ground for going about it in a rather unremarkab­le, wishy-washy kind of way.

The play follows a prep-school student named Jo, a plucky and forward-thinking young lesbian and an aspiring graphic novelist/artist.

At frequent intervals, artistic director Heidi S. Howard’s staging comes to vibrant life, generally involving a lot of snappy video projection­s, despite some technical glitches on opening night.

Howard and scenic designer Elisabeth Cooper utilize every square inch of the company’s tiny Back Stage studio space, effectivel­y positionin­g the audience right in the thick of things. The seating area is configured like gymnasium bleachers.

Different “chapters” unfold in a classroom, where a few of the students’ desks are interspers­ed among the front row of seats, or around a set of lockers or on a bas- ketball court (of sorts). There’s even a loft in one corner of the space for depicting Jo’s home life.

Literally, from a production angle, the show covers considerab­le territory, with no room to spare.

Figurative­ly, as written by Sarah Gubbins, “FML” (a bit of texting jargon that can’t be specified in a family newspaper) is all over the place in a more problemati­c sense. It’s a real letdown from the upand-coming Chicago playwright whose sharp and sophistica­ted “Fair Use” was mounted by Actor’s Express in 2009.

Aspects of this script feel unfocused, veering off-course on disjointed, distractin­g tangents. Most pointless is the character of Jo’s older brother, a presumably cool and caring role model who’s (inconceiva­bly) totally oblivious to his sister’s soulsearch­ing.

While other segments dote on two of Jo’s over- drawn classmates, the bullies tormenting her only pose a nominal threat — relegated to drawings in her sketchbook instead of a palpable presence in the story.

As Jo, newcomer Renita James may not be physically believable as a pivotal member of the school’s basketball team (never mind her iffy skills shooting hoops in a couple of scenes).

She possesses an obvious energy and emotion that’s initially ingratiati­ng.

As Jo’s circumstan­ces and outlook deepen, however, the actress seems to choke in terms of digging beneath the surface to fully capture or convey the spiritual connection and creative inspiratio­n Jo finds in the sad, dejected misfits from the famous Carson McCullers novel “The Heart is a Lonely Hunter.”

Dorothy Bell is oddly reserved and removed as the influentia­l English teacher who introduces Jo’s class to McCullers. Not that the part need be portrayed as an eccentric Miss Jean Brodie type, but it does require a certain impassione­d “attitude” that’s sorely absent in Bell’s performanc­e.

“I like how much the characters think (and) how much they don’t say,” Jo notes about the book.

Somehow, the same applies to “FML”: the play’s thinking is right; it’s in the saying of it that things come undone.

 ?? STUNGUN PHOTOGRAPH­Y ?? Renita James (left) and Dorothy V. Bell play a prep-school student and her influentia­l teacher in “FML: How Carson McCullers Saved My Life” at 7 Stages.
STUNGUN PHOTOGRAPH­Y Renita James (left) and Dorothy V. Bell play a prep-school student and her influentia­l teacher in “FML: How Carson McCullers Saved My Life” at 7 Stages.

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