Tuesday, May 6, 2008

Five Flights Does it Again

So, did you hear that Andy and Allison got married?

The Five Flights Theater Company, who last brought us an in-depth examination of the art of growing up with their debut Don’t Step on the Cracks, have chosen for the subject of their newest play another age-old institution: marriage.

The new show is called You Are Cordially Invited to the Wedding of Andrew Pepperidge and Allison Short and everyone is present for the wedding: Allison’s brother and sister, Josh (Jake Bartush) and Emma (Kacy Rice), Andy’s best high school friends Nick (Adam Delia) and Ben (Nick Hepsoe), Nick’s girlfriend Julia (Sara Lukasiewicz), Ben’s ex-girlfriend Audrey (Carlyn Kautz), old friends Chris-who-is-now-Narhari (Will Lacker) and Liz (Laurel Casillo), and college buddies Casey (Eruck Tait) and party-planner Beth (Claire McGinley). The event is directed by Alli Taylor and stage managed by Adam Chanler-Berat, both founding members of the Five Flights Theater Company. When everyone gathers for the wedding, the old values clash with the new ideals, and some of the old friends clash with the old.

In comparison, You Are Cordially Invited to the Wedding of Andrew Pepperidge and Allison Short may seem like a complete opposite from their last show, but there are themes that have carried over. Cordially Invited also tackles the subject of growing up and dealing with the twists life can send you, but this time through the lens of one couple of friends tying the knot.

A note in the program states, “No matter how mature you think you've gotten, you're never quite ready for the first time one of your friends tells you they're about to get married.” This is the sentiment that rings true for the majority of the characters in the play. It would seem that no one is truly ready for Andy and Allison to get married, so how do those gathered at the reception deal with it? This is often shown through monologues (beautifully lit by Marymount Manhattan College senior Lisa Hufnagel) during which character toast the bride and groom. Each character has a different opinion on their friends’ nuptials and how they take it out on themselves and each other makes for compelling and honest drama. The more we see ourselves in each of the characters, the more we can laugh and cry at the events of the evening.

I was impressed by the fluidity of the writing. For those of you unfamiliar with the Five Flights Theater Company, let me take this opportunity to explain. Five Flights is made up of twelve company members, all recent or upcoming graduates of Marymount Manhattan College. In their last endeavor, they came together on a theme, separated to write scenes and sketches, then came back together to create a show. With Cordially Invited, the company members worked together creating characters around the performers and collaborating on the script.

The product is an organic theatre piece that is marked with the sensibilities of not one playwright, but several. And yet, there’s no feel of “too many cooks” with their work. The multiple perspectives add up to make a final product that is thoughtful and very real, especially for those of us who have friends who are recently engaged or married.

Cordially Invited is a work in progress. It is listed as such in the program. And it definitely is. There is room for improvement. There are scenes that could be tighter, exposition that could be clearer and a few general tweaks to be made. But the show has obviously gone through a lot of work already. The original script, so I’ve been told, clocked in at three and a half hours. The current production came down at just over an hour.

Five Flights has definitely developed a sense of honesty and a style that easily makes them one of the most exciting things to happen to New York theatre in recent years. They’re hardly the first to try to make theatre that speaks to a generation, but they’re doing the best that I’ve seen in a while. Sorry for the superlatives, but it’s true. As company member Jake Bartush put it, “It’s about growing up and coming to terms with our lack of understanding.”

Where Don’t Step on the Cracks got Five Flights noticed for doing brave, new theatre, Cordially Invited solidifies them as a voice in the theatre that will be around for some time. Look forward to their upcoming show coming this September.


You Are Cordially Invited to the Wedding of Andrew Pepperidge and Allison Short is no longer running.