Images: 
Total Rating: 
**1/2
Previews: 
November 2, 2012
Opened: 
November 5, 2012
Ended: 
November 24, 2012
Country: 
USA
State: 
New York
City: 
New York
Company/Producers: 
Apothecary Theater Co.
Theater Type: 
off-Broadway
Theater: 
Clurman Theater
Theater Address: 
410 West 42nd Street
Running Time: 
2 hrs
Genre: 
Drama
Author: 
James McManus
Director: 
Kevin Kittle
Review: 

“Everybody bleeds” is the subhead for this Apothecary Theater Company production of Blood Potato. It is an accurate description of sitting through this play about family dysfunction in the midst of a “crank” epidemic in the broken-down steel town Donora, PA. “Crank” is a slang name for methamphetamine, and “teeners” are a name given to some users, in this case, Fly (Zack Griffiths), and Janelle, beautifully played by Beth Wittig.

Fly has two brothers who make-up his remaining family. His older brother, Declan, has just left the Army and is the former boyfriend of Janelle. He’s given an excellent portrayal by Dennis Flanagan, Quinn is the middle brother, a school bus driver (Mike Mihm) and the intellectually weakest of the siblings. Rounding out this cast of characters is Adrienne (Carrie Watt), a 14-year-old student who rides on Quinn’s bus.

The story revolves around the economic circumstances that everyone living in Donora must endure since the steel mills and other businesses shut down a number of years before. Fly and Janelle have dealt with the despair by doing “crank.” Declan gets work in a plastics factory because of his veteran status and has tried to help Fly get various jobs that the latter ultimately fails at because of his addiction. Ultimately Fly, Declan, and Janelle decide to make crystal meth as a way of getting the money they all want so they can escape Donora. Declan has access to the chemicals, Janelle knows how to “cook” them to make the crank, and Fly knows how to sell the product.

Janelle and Declan were childhood sweethearts, and she wants to re-connect with him. He won’t have anything to do with her so long as she is addicted to meth. She had a drug-fueled relationship with Fly that lurks in the background, but she still gets herself clean. Fly is supposed to be doing the same but is incapable of letting go of the crank. Added to this stew of drugs and romance is Quinn and his relationship with Adrienne, the student on his bus. While their story is beautifully handled in the production, it doesn’t really fit well with the intensity of the core drama between Fly, Declan and Janelle.

In the end, despite hard work by the cast, the play fails because there is nothing compelling for the audience to care about the struggles of the characters. The playwright and director employ a curious device with the use of puppets as a method a fleshing out the relationship backstory of the characters. It is an interesting attempt but ultimately doesn’t draw the audience in to the characters in the present.

Doug Durlacher’s set is worth mentioning for the ingenious way he used the limited stage space to move the action from point to point. A chain-link fence is the only discordant element. Robin Paterson’s lighting is effective in the service of the story.

Cast: 
Beth Wittig, Zack Griffiths, Carrie Watt, Dennis Flanagan, Mike Mihm
Technical: 
Set: Doug Durlacher. Light: Robin Paterson.
Critic: 
Scott Bennett
Date Reviewed: 
November 2012