'Reindeer' play is both hilarious, disturbing
Green Thursday Theatre Project's talking reindeer include Blitzen (Adrienne Perry),
left, Vixen (Traci Hartley) and Cupid (L. Jay Meyer).
| If you go
What: Green Thursday Theatre Project's production of Jeff Goode's "The Eight:
Reindeer Monologues," directed by Samantha K. Wyer.
When: 7 p.m. Thursday-Saturday and Dec. 21-23.
Where: Club Congress, 311 E. Congress St.
Tickets: $10, with discounts available, at Hotel Congress' front desk or by calling
795-4322.
Et cetera: Offended by racy language and talk of sex? Then this isn't for you. Audiences
must be 18 or over.
| Over the course of the 90-minute, one-act play, we go
from a very funny story about reindeers to a very dark one about rape.
|
By Kathleen Allen
ARIZONA DAILY STAR
You'd better watch out. This is one Santa Claus you don't want coming to your town.
Green Thursday Theatre Project's inaugural play, Jeff Goode's "The Eight: The Reindeer
Monologues," is dark and disturbing and dirty.
And it can be uproariously funny, as well.
But it isn't for anyone who holds the jolly old elf in any kind of esteem. "The Eight" takes no
pity on the fat guy.
The smooth production was directed by Samantha K. Wyer, Arizona Theatre Company's
associate artistic director. She has a deftness for comedy, and has an eye for the small details that
distinguish characters.
It was performed on the small stage at Club Congress - surely a first for that space. But it
worked: It's an intimate space and has an earthy feel. This play needed to be staged at an earthy
place.
The setup is this: There's a nasty rumor about Santa's extracurricular activities in the North
Pole's toy shop. Apparently, he has a sexual appetite that would exhaust Bill Clinton, and a keen
interest in bestiality and nonconsensual sex.
And he's been accused of some unseemly behavior with Vixen - behavior Vixen wanted no
part of ("When a doe says no, she means no"). The press is starting to catch wind of this scandal,
and Santa's elite reindeers - The Eight - decide to tell the story from their perspectives.
One by one, they take the stage, antlers swaying with their words, and give about a 10-minute
monologue about what's true - and not true - from their vantage point.
Each deer is well-drawn and has definite personality traits, from the overblown Hollywood
persona of Hollywood/Prancer, who's just looking for the right part, to the machismo of Dasher,
the lead deer, to the militant feminism of Blitzen; to the complacent "Santa can do no wrong"
Comet.
There were strong performances in this production, especially from Traci Hartley as Vixen,
the deer accusing Santa of the nasty deeds. She is sexy and flirty and tough as antlers outside, and
pained and vulnerable in.
L. Jay Meyer was funny and a little scary as a maniacal Cupid, the only openly gay reindeer.
He was decked out in a sequin shirt and heels and smoking a cigarette hand-rolled in pink paper,
and his observations of Santa, "a walking, talking, holly jolly sex crime," are delivered with
over-the-top flair.
Terry J. Erbe's Donner, a burned-out reindeer in a dirty, sweaty undershirt that barely covered
his beer belly, showed us the character's agony at the choices he had made in his life. And
Adrienne Perry's Blitzen let the reindeer's anger about Santa's indiscretions blaze with humor and
conviction.
The production - especially for a first one - was strong. Green Thursday has made an initial
splash, thanks to Wyer's solid direction and a talented cast.
|