GOPRIDE.COM

Can You Hear Me Now? I’m Dead!

Thu. April 10, 2008

By Michael J. Roberts

As Jean, the fantastic Peggy Noonan is a comic delight, bringing a very sweet humanity to what could easily be viewed as a manipulative and psychotic character. It is clear the playwright wrote this work with Noonan in mind, as their collaborations have been manifested on various stages for the last decade. Ms. Noonan, who was seen in last season's Passion Play at the Goodman, brings an almost childlike optimism to Jean who is desperately seeking attention.

The laughs unfurl as the dead man's family and colleagues are introduced to Jean as his family becomes hers. Molly Regan as Mrs. Gottlieb is wonderfully cutting as the mother whom wanted to be acknowledged by her son as ‘good'. Coburn Goss as the dead man's brother is terrific in bringing calm to the chaos. Mary Beth Fisher plays the dead man's long suffering wife and has great on stage chemistry with Ms. Noonan.

It is when Marc Grapey (Gordon, the dead man) takes the stage in the second act monologue that all the pieces of the puzzle begin to fit, and it is his commentary on mankind that gives Ruhl's play it's voice of reason (or unreason).

Director Jessica Thebus keeps the action moving at a swift pace on an overly sparse set. Though prior works of Ms. Ruhl, such as The Clean House and Eurydice, seem much tighter in construction, Dead Man's Cell Phone certainly accomplishes its goal as a social commentary on how people thrive attention and saying what other people want to hear just for a greater since of self importance and acceptance.

Dead Man's Cell Phone plays through July 27, 2008 at Steppenwolf's Upstairs Theatre, 1650 N. Halsted, Chicago. For tickets and show times please visit www.steppenwolf.org

Photo: Polly Noonan (left) and Marc Grapey (right) in Dead Man's Cell Phone by Sarah Ruhl, directed by Jessica Thebus at Steppenwolf Theatre March 27 – July 27, 2008. Photo by Michael Brosilow.

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