Subtitle: 
Or, The Vibrator Play
Images: 
Total Rating: 
***
Opened: 
May 14, 2011
Ended: 
June 12, 2011
Country: 
USA
State: 
Florida
City: 
Coral Gables
Company/Producers: 
GableStage
Theater Type: 
Regional
Theater: 
GableStage
Theater Address: 
Biltmore Hotel: 1200 Anastasia Avenue
Phone: 
305-445-1119
Website: 
gablestage.org
Running Time: 
2 hrs, 15 min
Genre: 
Comedy
Author: 
Sarah Ruhl
Director: 
Joseph Adler
Review: 

The 1880s was a time when American innovators found new ways to harness electricity, and as Sarah Ruhl's In the Next Room or the vibrator play shows, it wasn't all about the lighting -- although the lighting for In the Next Room is very good at GableStage, where the play benefits from stunning tech.

The setting is the home/office of a physician in a prosperous town somewhere north of New York City. The suggestively named Dr. Givings has discovered that use of the new electrical vibrator does wonders for women suffering what was then called hysteria, though he notes that it makes women who are sad happy and somehow saddens women who seem otherwise content.

When his wife, Catherine, asks about the mysterious sounds – mechanical and human -- coming from his treatment room, Dr. Givings puts her off with a bit of condescension. But Catherine enlists the help of the doctor's lonely assistant, Annie (Sally Bondi, who eventually gets to convey quite a lot in just a few seconds), and finds out what all the fuss is about. As delivered by Julie Kleiner, Catherine's first encounter is aurally reminiscent of Meg Ryan in "When Harry Met Sally," although subsequent experiences seem less derivative.

Meanwhile, Catherine worries over her inability to nurse her baby, so her husband and a family friend decide the friend's black housekeeper will serve as wet nurse. There's a bit of repetition -- the comings and goings to be expected at a doctor's office -- that can make the time drag. But Renata Eastlick as the wet nurse injects great warmth into the proceedings, and Ricky Waugh as an artist eager to experience the machine-enabled "paroxysms" brings a welcome lightness to the second act.

Tech is terrific. Victorian costumes have texture, grace, volume (for the women) and splendid tailoring. A two-level set splits the playing area into a parlor with piano and the treatment area above until the very end, when a lovely winter blue tableau takes over.

Parental: 
adult themes, mild nudity
Cast: 
Irene Adjan (Sabrina Daldry), Stephen G. Anthony (Mr. Daldry), Sally Bondi (Annie), Jim Ballard (Dr. Givings), Renata Eastlick (Elizabeth), Julie Kleiner (Catherine Givings), Ricky Waugh (Leo Irving)
Technical: 
Set: Lyle Baskin; Lighting: Omar Martos; Costumes: Ellis Tillman; Sound/Music: Matt Corey; Piano Compositions: Jonathan Bell; Production Stage Manager: Kristen Pieski.
Other Critics: 
MIAMI HERALD Christine Dolen ! / MIAMI NEW TIMES Gabriela Garcia + / MIAMI ARTZINE Roger Martin + / ENV MAGAZINE Ron Levitt +
Miscellaneous: 
New York debut at Lincoln Center Theater in November 2009; commissioned by Berkeley Repertory Theater in California and produced there in February 2009. Stephen G. Anthony's South Florida credits include A Round-Heeled Woman and The Lieutenant of Inishmore; Sally Bondi's include Speaking Elephant and Superior Donuts; Ricky Waugh's include Dying City and Betrayed.
Critic: 
Julie Calsi
Date Reviewed: 
May 2011