Rare is the human being who has not grappled with the mystery of death and its aftermath. Cultural speculations on the realms beyond the grave encompass simple regression to the earth (as observed in animals) and regeneration (as observed in plants), as well as elaborate recycling schemes involving transmigration into altered physical states. Christianity, however, promises its believers eternal liberation from corporal restraints within a mythic sanctuary—descriptions of which differ widely, no first-hand witness accounts ever having been reported. Roberta and Joe, of Going to a Place Where You Already Are, have enjoyed 30 years of marriage, comfortable in their atheist rejection of conventional dogma, but attendance at the funerals endemic to their age bracket brings them into ever-increasing proximity with Protestant Christian gospel lore. One day, while undergoing an MRI for what will turn out to be cancer, Roberta has a momentary vision of a boyish concierge offering her entry into a domain he identifies as heaven. This precipitates a crisis of, um, faith as Roberta contemplates the possibility of a future bereft of her beloved husband—misgivings shared by her granddaughter Ellie, whose recent love-at-first-sight epiphany also introduces uncertainty over the wisdom of investment in ephemeral joys. Fiction exploring the boundaries of mortality tends to avoid knotty theological arguments in favor of whimsical fancies cobbled from a melange of spiritual hearsay. Author Bekah Brunstetter refuses to traffic in harps, wings, or angels from Dubuque dancing on pins, though, instead zeroing in on the fundamental question of where we go after we leave here. The answer, it emerges, lies not in any particular sectarian creed, but in each individual's personal bliss. For Roberta, the paradise awaiting her is a place of favorite smells, sounds, foods—all the ice cream she wants—and eventually Joe, too, once he discovers where to look for her. Even a cosmological approach as rational and egalitarian as Brunstetter's could quickly succumb to sticky sentimentality in the wrong hands, but director Matt Hawkins never allows his actors to engage in stereotypal cuddliness, whether of the geriatric, millennial, or ambisexual varieties. Kathleen Ruhl and Art Fox anchor an ensemble making the most of Redtwist's tiny studio space (no easy task when stage furnishings include a laptop screen, a hospital bed and a motorized wheelchair) to invoke a cozy intimacy belying the weighty issues under scrutiny.
Images:
Ended:
July 23, 2017
Country:
USA
State:
Illinois
City:
Chicago
Company/Producers:
Redtwist Theater
Theater Type:
Regional
Theater:
Redtwist Theater
Theater Address:
1044 West Bryn Mawr Avenue
Genre:
Drama
Review:
Cast:
Miscellaneous:
This review first appeared in Windy City Times, 7/17
Critic:
Mary Shen Barnidge
Date Reviewed:
July 2017