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Facing East
Theatre Reviews by
Matthew Murray

Jay Perry, with Charles Lynn Frost and Jayne Luke
in the back
Photo by Julie Stark.
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In theatre, as in real estate, location is key. Carol
Lynn Pearson's play Facing East, about a Mormon
couple struggling to come to terms with their gay son's
suicide, can't be expected to have the same impact it must
have when it premiered last fall in Salt Lake City. But as
proved by the production at Atlantic Stage Two, which
features the entire original cast, this play is nonetheless
a powerful one on the East Coast as well.
That's because, while it may tackle issues of particular
interest or importance to one audience, it's ultimately a
universal examination of what parents and children can and
can't say to each other until it's too late. Though Pearson
has some trouble avoiding preachiness, letting her
characters declaim slightly too-generic points of view more
often than is ideal, she's quite good about not sacrificing
her characters, conflict, or color at the altar of the easy
way out. Unlike Confessions of a Mormon Boy, which
played Off-Broadway last year and gratuitously sexed up its
subject's spiritual struggle, Facing East doesn't
bear even the slightest trace of exploitation: only truth,
simply and beautifully told.
This compact emotional epic, which is tautly directed by
Jerry Rapier, covers some 75 minutes in a Salt Lake City
cemetery following the funeral of Andrew McCormick. The
gifted 24-year-old cellist ended his life just outside the
temple with the help of a shotgun, his final statement to
and about a church that made him into a person worthy of
being loved by his parents Alex and Ruth (Charles Lynn Frost
and Jayne Luke) and his live-in boyfriend Marcus (Jay
Perry), but that was unwilling to accept him in turn for who
he was.
Alex, unsatisfied with the service Andrew received,
resolves to give Andrew the proper reckoning before God: The
hard-line, doctrinal Ruth doesn't see the point, but Alex,
an on-the-rise radio star renowned for his daily "One-Minute
Dad" advice spots, insists, and begins conjuring up memories
of the boy they raised to become an impressive man, who
deeply believed everything he was taught but was still
excommunicated as soon as his true nature came to light.
Both parents are crippled with grief they've been afraid or
unable to show, but which manifests itself when they finally
meet the infamous Marcus, who's intent on saying his own
final goodbye.
The characters of the milquetoast father, the angry
mother with a secret, and the sainted traveler who's come to
teach them more about themselves about are not especially
complex. And when Ruth brays non-specifically hateful
complaints like "The gay lifestyle destroys people," or Alex
wittily rants about Utah being "a flaming Red State,"
Pearson's voice tends to overpower theirs.
But in the details of how the family worked and how
Andrew became the man Marcus could meet and fall in love
with (by way of a couple of fortunate, yet very believable,
coincidences) are revealed very real people all suffering
from very different crises of faith. You fully understand
who they are and the roles they all played in Andrew's fate;
you even come to truly know Andrew, who never appears
onstage, but is summoned with a series of flashbacks to
representative points in his life that are more touching and
less dramatically flimsy than they have any right to be.
The acting is equally solid, with Perry enormously
affecting as Marcus: Though young, good-looking, and
possessing no end of poise, charm, and humor, Perry
convinces you Marcus's life is for all intents and purposes
over, and what time is left is all about picking up the
pieces. Frost navigates the potentially jagged
contradictions of his character smoothly, and modulates his
anger with enough humanity that Alex never feels like a
screed machine. Luke has plenty of innate warmth that only
occasionally escapes from the chilly Ruth, but is a welcome
addition whenever it's witnessed.
Ruth would be something of a problem for any actress,
though - she's only a few steps away from caricature, and
feels like too monstrous a presence for a play fueled
primarily by weary rage. But if she makes it seem that
Pearson was trying too hard to get her points across, she's
all in Facing East that does. It's otherwise an
effortless examination of the barriers between (and within)
families and religion, and the sad casualties that can too
often result from incomplete bridges between the two.
Facing East
Through June 17
Atlantic Stage 2, 330 West 16th Street between 8th & 9th
Avenues
Running Time: 75 minutes with no intermission
Tickets online and current Performance Schedule:
TicketCentral
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