THEATER REVIEW : Skilled Performers Give Life to ‘Life’
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“Recalled to Life,” writer-director Michael Van Duzer’s comedy at St. Genesius Theatre, has a comforting message for the companions of AIDS patients--that there is closure in the grieving process and that re-entry into life is indeed possible.
Van Duzer is careful not to trivialize suffering, but, rather than dwelling on it, he picks up the story of composer-hero Josh (Mitch Silpa) two years after the death of Josh’s lover, when he’s finally able to find some joy in creating music again.
At a party for his close-knit “support system”--four friends who’ve helped him through his bereavement--Josh reveals he’s even made a tentative romantic foray during a recent trip to London.
Naturally, what Josh dismisses as a brief encounter proves anything but when his smitten paramour, Marek (Scott Atkinson), shows up without warning.
Marek is a hopelessly idealized figure--relentlessly sensitive, insightful and unselfish--but there’s an endearing tenderness in the performances as gun-shy Josh flounders through his fear of another commitment.
Harder to overlook is the tangle of subplots parading too many slice-of-life details without weight--a marriage foundering because the wife (Elizabeth Dement) dotes on Josh and neglects her spouse (Todd R. Hansen), an opening-night fiasco involving a choreographer (Hope Levy) collaborating with Josh and Josh’s one-time lover, Gary (John Bisom), angling to rekindle the flame.
The overly polite comedy lacks real bite--even the allegedly catty Gary proves a softy--but the centered, skillful performers (especially the hilarious Levy) are engaging compensation.
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