Total Rating: 
**
Opened: 
April 2, 2010
Ended: 
May 2, 2010
Country: 
USA
State: 
California
City: 
Los Angeles
Company/Producers: 
Ponturo Management Group & Sande Media
Theater Type: 
Regional
Theater: 
Elephant Space Theater
Theater Address: 
6322 Santa Monica Boulevard
Phone: 
323-960-7776
Running Time: 
1 hr, 45 min
Genre: 
Drama
Author: 
Don Ponturo
Director: 
Duane Daniels
Review: 

 A mixture of "The Office" (without the humor) and No Exit, Survival Exercise depicts four white-collar workers toiling for an unnamed product design company which is launching a "talking-house" project. Although Mason (Mark Sande) has been dumped by the company for being too old, he is still on the scene when the play opens, trying to organize a sales meeting. Helping (or is it betraying?) him is Sharon (Cheryl Bricker), a blonde, mini-skirted exec who once was his lover. Andrew (Michael Sweeney) is young, ambitious and neurotic; his foil is Susan (Michelle Murphy), a perpetually hysterical girl at the bottom of the office food chain.

The product is absurd, ditto the language, actions and psychology of all four characters. Ponturo is good at satirizing the gobbledygook and chalk-talks employed by corporate hacks, but he stretches the play's thin and repetitive story line out too long. Also, his over-use of stylized, staccato-like dialogue becomes annoying; people are forever starting a conversation only to jump to an unrelated topic interrupted by yet another non sequitur.

As directed by Duane Daniels, the actors work (valiantly and skillfully) on a near-bare stage (four silver chairs) under an X-treme lighting scheme (lots of intense red) intended to convey that they aren't really in a corporate conference room but a cage in hell. Unfortunately, I began to have the same feeling an hour into the play.

Cast: 
Cheryl Bricker, Michelle Murphy, Mark Sande, Michael Sweeney.
Technical: 
Set: Duane Daniels; Lighting & Sound: Matt Richter; Production Stage Mgr: J.C. Gafford.
Other Critics: 
LA TIMES 4/10: "Well-played emotional beats make a truthful cautionary point about the seductive dangers of a letting a job take the place of real life." / LA WEEKLY: 4/10. "It's all about souls struggling to make sense of a reality that can't be known."
Critic: 
Willard Manus
Date Reviewed: 
April 2010