Total Rating: 
***
Opened: 
December 1, 2007
Ended: 
December 23, 2007
Country: 
USA
State: 
California
City: 
Carlsbad
Company/Producers: 
New Village Arts
Theater Type: 
Regional; Independent
Theater: 
New Village Arts Theater
Theater Address: 
2787B State Street
Phone: 
760-433-3245
Website: 
newvillagearts.org
Running Time: 
1 hr, 45 min
Genre: 
Comedy-Drama
Author: 
Amy Chini & Tom Zohar
Director: 
Joshua Everett Johnson
Review: 

Playwrights Amy Chini and Tom Zohar's Off the Ground may well become the alternative Christmas play. It has the elements that make for a good holiday play. There is conflict, there is personality, and there is a happy ending. Why alternative? There is also profanity. Lots of it, but not one word gratuitous.

84-year-old Grampa Dick (Charlie Riendeau) lost his one-and-only wife four years ago and is still trying to cope. His roommate, late twenties grandson Joel (Francis Gercke), is suffering through the first year of his divorce with his young daughter off with his ex- and her current boyfriend. The whole family is coming over for a long Christmas stay.

This family has not been together in quite some time, and they are all staying in Grampa Dick's large house. Joel's older sister, Susan (Wendy Waddell) and her husband, Luke (Terry Scheidt), are in a tense marriage. Susan is a very successful realtor, while sous chef Luke has just been fired from his job yet again. It seems he is too outspoken, referring to his last boss as an ***hole.  

Mother Virginia (Sandra Ellis-Troy) is overly protective (read: controlling). Her husband, Jim (Jack Missett), would be content with just a bit of peace and quiet. They have brought along lovely Donna (Amanda Morrow), a divorcee just about Joel's age. And Mom doesn't think she's manipulative.

Off the Ground is excellently scripted with authentic sounding dialogue. As the plot thickens, director Joshua Everett Johnson raises the volume of his actors, then creates a cacophony of ranting, raving and just plain gibberish with overlapping dialogue. One can easily see why this family does not have frequent reunions.

Watching Morrow react to the various conversations and escalating confrontations, one can almost read her thoughts: "Been there, done that," "I'm glad this isn't my family," Why am I here?", "Poor Joel, what does he think of me?", and much more. She maintains a constant, near-silent counterpoint to the spikes of this family's dysfunction.

The rest of the cast performs with gusto, some running the emotional scale of one to ten rapidly, others slowly building their emotions, and gramps just sitting back watching.

Off the Ground is exceptional because all of the elements, from writing and directing to action and design create a unity. New Village Arts has produced another in a long string of excellent theater. This is a must-see, highly realistic production -- unless profanity is offensive to you.


Parental: 
profanity
Cast: 
Charlie Riendeau, Francis Gercke, Wendy Waddell, Terry Scheidt, Sandra Ellis-Troy, Jack Missett, Amanda Morrow
Technical: 
Stage Mgr: Avalon Hernandez; Costumes/Set: Kristianne Kurner; Lighting: Ashley Jinks; Sound: Adam Brick; Props: P. J. Anbey
Critic: 
Robert Hitchcock
Date Reviewed: 
December 2007