The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

‘Next to Normal’ an ‘intensely personal’ story

- By Bonnie Goldberg

WESTPORT — Have you ever questioned how precious and precarious life can be? How a single incident can have a profound and long-lasting influence on all your future days?

Westport Country Playhouse and its contempora­ry set by Adam Koch are the perfect venue for “Next to Normal,” an intensely personal story of a family in crisis, playing until April 24.

Many years ago, Tom Kitt and Brian Yorkey were given the challenge to compose a 10-minute play about electric shock therapy. The result, now a fullfledge­d musical, has won them a trio of 2009 Tony Awards as well as the 2010 Pulitzer Prize for Drama.

Actor Dar. Lee. See. Ah. is wonderfull­y convincing as Diana, who struggles daily, almost minute to minute, with a diagnosis and label of bipolar depression. The loss of a baby son Gabriel 16 years before haunts her. To survive, she regularly communicat­es with Gabe, a powerfully present Daniel J. Maldonado, as the teenager he would have been had he lived.

Dan, a faithfully supportive Wilson Jermaine Heredia, is the faithful husband who tries to guide Diana through her mental and emotional ups and downs, chauffeuri­ng her to doctor’s visits and the succession of drug therapies. When all seems darkest, after a plethora of pill combinatio­ns and counseling don’t work, her

doctor (Katie Thompson) suggests electric shock therapy.

Natalie, a struggling teen with her own issues, desperatel­y wants a normal mother and normal family, but she will settle for one that is “next to normal.” Now with a boyfriend Henry, a tender and concerned Gian Perez, by her side, she craves a mom to confide in and get advice from, not the woman who is distant and unattached.

Ashley LaLonde is agonizingl­y perfect as the daughter who yearns for a simple, even dull existence. Marcos Santana does a splendid job directing and choreograp­hing a fine cast of color, dealing with the difficult subject of mental illness.

Did you ever feel that some days you need a stronger Elmer’s or Gorilla Glue just to hold on to life? Being caught in a pandemic for more than two years

can provide a good example of the difficulti­es. Or that you were trapped in a soap opera and you can’t find the remote control to change the channel?

Maybe your life is a bad movie and all you want to do is walk out of the theater. If those feelings resonate or are even only remotely familiar, you will commiserat­e with and feel compassion for Diana Goodman and her family.

For tickets ($50 and up), call Westport Country Playhouse, 25 Powers Court, Westport, at 203227-4177 or go online at westportpl­ayhouse.org.

Performanc­es are Tuesday at 7 p.m., Wednesday at 2 and 8 p.m., Thursday and Friday at 8 p.m., Saturday at 3 and 8 p.m. and Sunday at 3 p.m.

With songs that evoke both laughter and tears, follow a family caught in a personal and private battle that affects everyone in their world.

 ?? Westport Country Playhouse / Contribute­d photo ?? “Next to Normal,” on stage at the Westport Country Playhouse, is an ‘intensely personal’ story.
Westport Country Playhouse / Contribute­d photo “Next to Normal,” on stage at the Westport Country Playhouse, is an ‘intensely personal’ story.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States