Images: 
Total Rating: 
***
Previews: 
June 19, 2018
Opened: 
June 27, 2018
Ended: 
July 29, 2018
Country: 
USA
State: 
California
City: 
Los Angeles
Company/Producers: 
Geffen Playhouse
Theater Type: 
Regional
Theater: 
Geffen Playhouse
Theater Address: 
10886 Le Conte Avenue
Phone: 
310-208-5454
Website: 
geffenplayhouse.org
Running Time: 
2 hrs
Genre: 
Drama
Author: 
Amanda Peet
Director: 
Tyne Rafaeli
Review: 

Who should control the life of a young tennis prodigy is the question that lies at the heart of Our Very Own Carlin McCullough, Amanda Peet’s drama which is now in a world-premiere run at the Geffen Playhouse. The play, directed by Tyne Rafaeli, came out of the Geffen’s development program and is the rare (and welcome) example of a major L.A. theater taking a chance on a new work.

When we first meet the tennis prodigy, 10-year-old Carlin (Abigail Dylan Harrison), she is being coached by Jay (Joe Tippett), a failed pro player who sees great potential in her and is willing to work for next to nothing to aid her career. The third side in the play’s triangle is Cyn (Mamie Gummer), Carlin’s mom. A woman who was abandoned by her husband (known sarcastically to her and Carlin as ”the sperm donor”), Cyn struggles mightily to get through life. Money is tight, she’s on her own, and as she admits at one point, “ is in a committed relationship with alcohol.”

Cyn’s a bit of an emotional wreck but she sublimates her desperation by devoting her life to Carlin’s budding career, to such a degree that it approaches pathology. She becomes an over-bearing stage mom, not only involving herself in every aspect of her daughter’s life but trying to run it as well. This puts her in a collision course with Jay, especially when it comes time (in act one) for professional decisions to be made about Carlin’s future.

The triggering mechanism here is when a Stanford University assistant coach, Salif (Tyee Tilghman) spots Carlin in action and suggests to Cyn that the girl should be sent to a well-known tennis academy, where intensive coaching and training might benefit her. If she got through that four-year program she might be offered a tennis scholarship to a prestigious university like Stanford—or even a pro contract. Cyn likes the idea of the academy: all of Carlin’s expenses would be paid and her game, presumably, would be taken to another level.

Bitterly opposing her is Jay, who hates the academy for the way it regiments its students, turns the game of tennis into a joyless business. He also resents being dumped as her coach, cut off from the girl he has truly come to love over the years.

Love, or at least lust, is the sub-text of his complicated relationship with Cyn. They have had powerful feelings for each other, but he has always struggled to keep those feelings in check, knowing how overly needy and unstable Cyn was. He also knew that it would mess things up between him and Carlin if he went to bed with her mother. The girl, after all, sees him as a surrogate father, idealizes him, really.

The dynamics of the complicated relationships between the play’s three main characters are intensified in act two, which takes place seven years later, when Carlin (Caroline Heffernan) is seventeen. She’s been through a lot since we last saw her, having dropped out of the academy, given up tennis for a while, grown into a sensitive young woman. But she has once again hooked up with Jay and started competing on the courts again, showing enough skill to once again attract the attention of Salif, now head coach of the tennis program at a small mid-west college. He offers Carlin a full scholarship, but Cyn doesn’t think she should take it, feeling that she still has the potential to become a pro. Jay, of course, disagrees vehemently with her.

The explosive confrontations and revelations at the end of act two are as surprising as they are stunning, especially when the tearful Carlin bellows, “I hate fucking tennis!”

The Geffen’s production, which features Tim Mackabee’s sliding sets (kitchen, motel rooms, tennis courts) and can boast of superior acting and directing, does Peet’s cautionary play proud.

Parental: 
adult themes, profanity
Cast: 
Mamie Gummer, Abigail Dylan Harrison, Caroline Heffernan, Tyee Tilghman, Joe Tippet
Technical: 
Set: Tim Mackabee; Costumes: Elizabeth Caitlin Ward; Lighting: Lap Chi Chu; Original Music & Sound: Lindsay Jones; Dramaturg: Amy Levinson; Production Stage Manager: Cressa Amundsen
Critic: 
Willard Manus
Date Reviewed: 
June 2018