Images: 
Total Rating: 
***
Previews: 
September 15, 2015
Opened: 
October 8, 2015
Ended: 
December 13, 2015
Country: 
USA
State: 
New York
City: 
New York
Company/Producers: 
Manhattan Theater Club
Theater Type: 
Broadway
Theater: 
Samuel J. Friedman Theater
Theater Address: 
261 West 47th Street
Website: 
foolforlovebroadway.com
Running Time: 
75 min
Genre: 
Drama
Author: 
Sam Shepard
Director: 
Daniel Aukin
Review: 

Love is "the absolute hell," says Sam Shepard, whose revival of Fool for Love brings in the combative lovers to battle their demons and desires on the stage of the Samuel J. Friedman Theater. Apparently, the heightened passion of Shepard's 1983 play was inspired by his own marital situation when he left his wife for an affair with Jessica Lange.

The play opens in a run-down hotel in the Mojave Desert, a setting as beaten-down as its resident, May (Nina Arianda) who has escaped here to hide from her lover, Eddie, a rodeo stuntman played by Sam Rockwell. May has a new beau, a bland young man (Tom Pelphrey) who offers her some security that is welcome, if boring. On the shadowy edge of the stage, sits a ghostly Old Man, watching, waiting and wheezing. Persuasively portrayed by Gordon Joseph Weiss, his comments eventually confirm the bottom line of May's and Eddie's unyielding, 15-year relationship.

The role of Eddie seems written for Rockwell's easy, macho cowpoke manner, with his loping walk and legs slightly bowed. He arrives after having driven almost 3,000 miles to hunt down May, determined to bring her home to their trailer in Wyoming. When she refuses to go, the battles begin, Eddie thrusting May across the room, banging her into walls, slamming doors. May, with Arianda's agility, gives as good as she gets with her own wiry rugged moves, stopping him once with a knee to the groin. When Eddie turns his back and heads for the door, she streaks across the room, leaps on his back and hangs on. She wants him to stay, she wants him to go. He threatens her with some fancy lasso maneuvers. They make fast, almost violent love and then go back to battling.

David S. Leong's fight sequences are exhausting and jacked up with Ryan Rumery's amplified booming door slams. Oddly, as theatrically bruising as this relationship is, there is a subcurrent of alienation hovering below the surface. The acting is convincing, and Arianda is as physically robust and limber as always and yet, like a needy child, she retreats to hunch over in the corner or huddle on the bed. Rockwell can certainly defend himself against his girlfriend's fury but is firmly zeroed in on his original goal, to bring her home to Wyoming. As May's date, Tom Pelphrey is far less splashy, but convincing in his bland direct manner.

Director David Aukin keeps the puzzling pieces in place and paces the play with tension. He designed a down-trodden set for this disaffecting tale, tracing the passing hours with lighting by Justin Townsend. Fool for Love first debuted on the New York stage off-Broadway in 1983. Last year, this production originated at the Williamstown Theater Festival.

A romance? No, an obsession and a well-acted character story of disaffected people who do not ride off into the sunset but are obviously bound, loving and hating, right to the end.

Cast: 
Sam Rockwell, Nina Arianda, Gordon Joseph Weiss, Tom Pelphrey.
Technical: 
Set: Daniel Aukin; Costumes: Anita Yavich; Lighting: Justin Townsend; Sound: Ryan Rumery; Movement and Fights: David S. Leong; Stage Manager: Kyle Gates
Miscellaneous: 
This review first appeared in CityCabaret.com, 10/15
Critic: 
Elizabeth Ahlfors
Date Reviewed: 
October 2015