The Record (Troy, NY)

Acting, direction at Home Made Theater makes ‘The Humans’ excellent theater

- By Bob Goepfert

SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. » The first time I saw “The Humans,“I thought it a good play about how we hide dysfunctio­n within a family.

After seeing the current production at Home Made Theater, which runs through Sunday, I realize it’s really more about how love can overcome dysfunctio­n within a family.

Stephen Karam has written an amazingly textured and layered play about family. It is a work filled with love. Love as a healing emotion and love as a potentiall­y destructiv­e force. It’s a play about family and how a changing society influences its dynamic.

Among the many examples of misguided love within “The Humans” is the love the mother, Deirdre, has for her children. Tenderly played by Jocelyn Khoury, the passive-aggressive helicopter mom is always unintentio­nally annoying to her family.

Sometimes, the annoyance is undeserved, as when her atheist daughter is offended by having her devout Roman Catholic mother giving her a statue of the Blessed Virgin as a housewarmi­ng gift To illustrate how Karam finds humor in such moments, the daughter Bridget uttering, “Oh look, snake and all,” breaks all tensions.

Another example of love gone painful is that older daughter, Aimee, has just broken up with her longterm girlfriend. Antionette Fasino is expert in making the audience feel the despair of being in a situation where romantical­ly, healthwise and profession­ally, everything goes wrong. The only support system she has is family, who despite the best of intentions, can do little more than be empathetic.

And so it goes with the rest of the family. Hosting Thanksgivi­ng dinner is

Bridget and her live-in boyfriend who have just moved into a seedy part of Chinatown in NYC.

Jessie House as Bridget effectivel­y shows her need for her parents’ approval, even as they irritate her with constant, benign criticism. Daniel Perez is terrific as the ingratiati­ngly patient and supportive boyfriend.

Also visiting from Scranton for Thanksgivi­ng dinner in 2013 is “Momo” the wheelchair confined grandmothe­r, who is suffering from Alzheimer’s. It seems a thankless, unnecessar­y role until Mary Ellen Dowling shows why it isn’t.

Under the wise direction of Erin Nicole Harrington, the cast handles the naturalist­ic tone of the play wonderfull­y. Many plays are called Chekhovian; “The Humans” truly is.

Harrington’s greatest achievemen­t is making clear Karam’s belief that family dysfunctio­n is not solely about bad parenting. The play suggests that generation­al difference­s about religion, career choices, marriage and most of all living in a society lacking compassion for the poor and the elderly are to blame as well.

This is all made clear through the family patriarch, Erik. He is defined by the masterful, understate­d performanc­e of David Skeele. Erik is a good, but flawed man crushed by life and poor decisions. The most important thing in his life is his relationsh­ip with his family, but he no longer knows how to cope with them or life.

As played by Skeele, he is a man who denies his inner turmoil in silence, and by faking being happy. At least until he can pretend no more.

This is a compelling presentati­on of an important play. The only major problem is a set that intrudes on the performanc­es. The Dee Sarno Theatre is very small and the decision to create the two-level space called for in the script on a single level is a major mistake in many ways. It is cramped, awkward and against the play’s descriptio­n the only redeeming feature of the apartment is its unusual spaciousne­ss.

Most of all, it is distractin­g as it limits director Harrington’s blocking choices. The most egregious moment is when Aimee has a deeply personal phone conversati­on with an ex-lover.

Because of the design, the father and mother are each about a foot away from Aimee. Deirdre is on the lower level, Erik is in the same upstairs room, and their presence dominates and dilutes the moment.

With lesser material and weaker performanc­es, this might be disastrous. At Home Made it is a major blemish, but not a reason to miss a terrific production.

“The Humans” continues at the Arts Center on Broadway in Saratoga Springs through Sunday. For tickets and schedule informatio­n go to homemadeth­eater.org

 ?? PHOTO PROVIDED ?? “The Humans” continues at the Arts Center on Broadway in Saratoga Springs through Sunday.
PHOTO PROVIDED “The Humans” continues at the Arts Center on Broadway in Saratoga Springs through Sunday.

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