The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Synchronic­ity tackles the topical ‘Strait of Gibraltar’

- By Bert Osborne For the AJC

Miriam is a young Jewish woman with a high-level job at a Manhattan bank. Sameer is an undocument­ed Muslim immigrant from Morocco who works at a deli. They meetcute at the party of a mutual friend, yet the central issue of Andrea Lepcio’s play “Strait of Gibraltar” isn’t merely a typical matter of opposites attracting, but rather a question about whether their love can truly survive and conquer all — even the Patriot Act.

Their romance blossoms sweetly. She’s a Red Sox fan, he likes the Yankees, but they’re kissing “cousins” in no time. He makes her coffee, she knits him a sweater, and for a while, everything’s great. In artistic director Rachel May’s premiere of “Gibraltar” for Synchronic­ity Theatre, weeks or months pass in several nicely designed video montages by Amanda Sachtleben.

The bond between Miriam and Sameer grows deeper, intellectu­ally as well as emotionall­y. They have literary conversati­ons about “Moby Dick” and “Ulysses,” political discussion­s of the Gaza Strip and West Bank, or trade observatio­ns about religion or the extent to which the U.S. lives up to its perceived promise for foreign refugees. (The script is up to the minute, including a mention of the currently controvers­ial travel ban.)

She shares with him the highly personal manuscript of her unpublishe­d “historical fiction,” while he confides in her about his sister in Morocco and his plan to bring her to America. From there, things get complicate­d — involving Sameer’s dreams of starting his own cellphone business, Miriam’s decision to open a bank account for him (in her name), and the motivation­s behind both of their actions.

The first act of “Gibraltar” closes at the airport, as the couple waits to welcome the sister’s arrival, when aggressive government investigat­ors suddenly shout out to them and detain them for questionin­g.

The second act starts with alternatin­g interrogat­ions of Miriam and Sameer, containing a lot of overlappin­g dialogue about money laundering and terrorism threats, and a very rude awakening about, among other dangerous extremes, the invasive surveillan­ce techniques used to make (or make up) the case against them.

Co-starring in the Synchronic­ity production, Maggie Birgel and Benjamin Dewitt Sims run the gamut — from smitten lovers to hardened prisoners — with a calm and collected conviction that belies their relatively unproven resumes: She’s done some children’s theater at Horizon and Georgia Ensemble; he just finished the apprentice­ship program with Aurora.

May’s supporting cast features Kathleen Wattis in a few scenes of ill-conceived comic relief as Miriam’s flighty, frantic mother. Rounding out the company are Suehyla El-Attar and Brian Ashton Smith in various roles (the detectives, the sister, a lawyer).

What begins as a leisurely paced romance, and methodical­ly develops into something much more complex, feels slightly rushed in its overly abrupt resolution. In the process of packing several mindful and dramatic punches along the way, the star-crossed romance at the heart of “Gibraltar” seems to get sidetracke­d and shortchang­ed in all the commotion. When Miriam and Sameer finally reassert their love for each other at the end, it rings oddly unmoving.

 ?? BY JERRY SIEGEL PHOTOGRAPH­Y PHOTOS CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Benjamin Dewitt Sims and Maggie Birgel co-star in “Strait of Gibraltar” at Synchronic­ity Theatre.
BY JERRY SIEGEL PHOTOGRAPH­Y PHOTOS CONTRIBUTE­D Benjamin Dewitt Sims and Maggie Birgel co-star in “Strait of Gibraltar” at Synchronic­ity Theatre.

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