BOB BRADER






We Call Her Benny: Anna to the Infinite Power
by Duncan Pflaster


Good theatre doesn't need special effects to be effective, only a good
script, good direction, and talented actors to present it.  We Call Her Benny,
written and directed by Suzanne Bachner, is a perfect example.

The story is delivered in fragments, with two non-linear stories from Anna's
life being told simultaneously. The play unfolds like a puzzle box, shifting and
changing with each new piece of information. One story is that of adult Anna
(Judy Krause) and her alcoholic husband (Tim Smallwood) sexually
experimenting with Anna's childhood friend Gaby (Morgan Lindsey Tachco)
and her boyfriend Peter (Bob Brader); meanwhile Anna is trying to deal with
the emotional demands of her clingy birth mother (Candice Owens), and the
taunts of her imagined stillborn brother (Nathan Faudree). The other story is
of 1980s teenage Anna (Anna Bridgeforth), who is bipolar, seeing a therapist
(Einar Gunn), having jailbait sex with an older family friend (Danny
Wiseman), and searching for medical information on her birth mother,
despite her dad (Bob Celli) worrying that it might offend her hospitalized
mom.

I was fortunate enough to catch an early one-hour version of the play in last
year's Frigid Festival (review here), so I was very intrigued to see what had
been done with the piece when it was expanded into a full-length.  The
stories have been deepened, giving the characters more breadth (especially
for Kevin, Anna's husband, and Max, teenage Anna's pedophilic boyfriend),
and though the play still maintains its brisk and clever air, Bachner is not
afraid to explore the darker places.  (Even in the previous production, she
took unexpected risks with her stories characters, but now she has the
chance to fully explore her themes in greater detail).

Bachner has a genius for dialogue; the early scenes lightly brush the surface
of the plot while subtextually illuminating the issues that will become more
evident as the play continues.  Even light banter has an underlying confusion
and pain that the actors dig their teeth into.
Her direction, as before, is exquisitely theatrical- Four black cubes are the
only scenery; All the actors are onstage throughout, and serve as living
wallpaper in scenes- at times playing teenage Anna's nervousness while
talking to her therapist, or melding into eroticism as Anna is being seduced,
or in a freeze-frame as the family photo of Anna's birth mother's extended
family.

In the previous production, there was a much greater physical resemblance
between the two Annas; in this version they don't look alike at all (aside from
being the only characters dressed in red), which led some audience
members to be initially confused (or so they said in the lobby), but eventually
they caught on.

The actors are great.  Most have carried over from the previous production.  
Anna Bridgeforth, as teenage Anna, is simply sublime, switching from
precocity to naïveté from moment to moment.  Newcomer to the cast Judy
Krause is wonderful as the mature Anna, her sardonic wit bristling at every
turn.  Morgan Lindsey Tachco is terrific as both Gaby and the Adoption
agent- a new scene with Gaby as a teenager is wonderful.  Bob Brader is
still hilarious as the eagerly seductive "I love cunnilingus!" Peter, but added
scenes also allow him a little more depth.  Candice Owens is a frightening
comic delight as Judy, the birth mother.  Danny Wiseman is great as
charismatic child molester Max, as well as a jerkass cab driver in the
opening scene.  Einar Gunn as Dr. Weitzner is subtle as a therapist should
be. Tim Smallwood is, by turns, funny and frightening as Kevin.  Bob Celli is
great as Dad.  Nathan Faudree is impishly evil as Brother.

Lighting Design by John Tees III perfectly enhances the production without
distracting.  Costume design by Nadia Volvic is great- everyone in shades of
grey and black, except the two Annas in red.

The show is terrific.  Go see it, if you want to see the amazing things that
theatre can do.

We Call Her Benny
The John Montgomery Theatre Company
The Michael Weller Theatre
311 West 43rd St. 6th Floor (between 8th & 9th Avenues)
Running Thursdays-Saturdays, and Mondays at 8pm.
Tickets $18 or $10 for students and seniors.
Smarttix.com or 212-868-4444

Photo Credit:Scott Wynn
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Duncan Pflaster is an award-winning playwright (2 time winner, Spotlight On
Award, "Best New Play" 2005 and 2006), whose plays have been produced
in Florida, Georgia, New Jersey, and New York. He also has been known to
direct, write music, play the ukulele, and (if his arm is twisted) act.