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Playing to a Packed House: The Fifth Annual Student Directed One-Acts |
| February 2006 |
Completely
directed, acted and tech-supported by students, five one-act plays
drew packed houses in the studio theatre, Kellner Performing Arts
Center. They were directed by Chris Biddle ’06, Grey Cusack
’07, Lauren-Elizabeth Palmer ’07 and Colette Perold
’06.
The evening opened with Colette’s “The Pleasure of Detachment”
by Perry Souchuk. This one-act portrays and questions the lunacy
versus genius of a woman writer strapped to her bed; the play forces
the audience to question notions of time, reality and sanity.
The second play was Chris’s production of “The Indian
Wants the Bronx,” by Israel Horovitz, in which two young,
male New Yorkers come upon a lost traveler from India who is unable
to communicate that he’s looking for his son in the city.
The two men proceed to mock, humiliate, and physically harm the
traveler as the play explores man’s inhumanity to his fellow
man.
Lauren-Elizabeth directed “Wanda’s Visit,” by
Christopher Durang—the third play. In this comedy, a surprise
visit from Wanda, Jim’s high school girlfriend, interrupts
Jim and Marsha, a restlessly married couple. Wanda’s inappropriate
stories and flirting are met by Marsha’s strained politeness;
Jim is flattered by the attention, until it becomes too much to
handle.
Fourth was ”Zealot” by Julie Marie Myatt, also directed
by Colette, that portrays four young people who witness the suicide
of a zealot; the shock of this death forces each of the onlookers
to question what they believe in enough to sacrifice life.
Finally, Grey’s production of Steve Martin’s one-act,
“Wasp” closed the evening. The play observes a White
Anglo-Saxon Protestant family living in the 1950s and examines its
values as those associated with W.A.S.P. principles and standards.
The student one-act plays are a much-anticipated event every year
and are a venue for student directors and actors to showcase their
talents in a broad array of plays and topics.

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