Anchor ads are not supported on this page.

4S Ranch Allied Gardens Alpine Baja Balboa Park Bankers Hill Barrio Logan Bay Ho Bay Park Black Mountain Ranch Blossom Valley Bonita Bonsall Borrego Springs Boulevard Campo Cardiff-by-the-Sea Carlsbad Carmel Mountain Carmel Valley Chollas View Chula Vista City College City Heights Clairemont College Area Coronado CSU San Marcos Cuyamaca College Del Cerro Del Mar Descanso Downtown San Diego Eastlake East Village El Cajon Emerald Hills Encanto Encinitas Escondido Fallbrook Fletcher Hills Golden Hill Grant Hill Grantville Grossmont College Guatay Harbor Island Hillcrest Imperial Beach Imperial Valley Jacumba Jamacha-Lomita Jamul Julian Kearny Mesa Kensington La Jolla Lakeside La Mesa Lemon Grove Leucadia Liberty Station Lincoln Acres Lincoln Park Linda Vista Little Italy Logan Heights Mesa College Midway District MiraCosta College Miramar Miramar College Mira Mesa Mission Beach Mission Hills Mission Valley Mountain View Mount Hope Mount Laguna National City Nestor Normal Heights North Park Oak Park Ocean Beach Oceanside Old Town Otay Mesa Pacific Beach Pala Palomar College Palomar Mountain Paradise Hills Pauma Valley Pine Valley Point Loma Point Loma Nazarene Potrero Poway Rainbow Ramona Rancho Bernardo Rancho Penasquitos Rancho San Diego Rancho Santa Fe Rolando San Carlos San Marcos San Onofre Santa Ysabel Santee San Ysidro Scripps Ranch SDSU Serra Mesa Shelltown Shelter Island Sherman Heights Skyline Solana Beach Sorrento Valley Southcrest South Park Southwestern College Spring Valley Stockton Talmadge Temecula Tierrasanta Tijuana UCSD University City University Heights USD Valencia Park Valley Center Vista Warner Springs

Stephen Karam’s The Humans gets tense

The setting has a way of obscuring any sort of resolution

The Humans: Thanksgiving in the shadow of no towers.
The Humans: Thanksgiving in the shadow of no towers.

San Diego Repertory Theatre’s production of Stephen Karam’s The Humans does a good deal of stage-setting before you even take your seat. A display by the box office provides “a behind-the scenes glimpse of the Scenic, Lighting, and Costume Design” for the show. The lobby walls feature an extensive exhibition of local artist Lauren LeVieux’s oil paintings, titled Presence: Time Through Structure, and designed to “enhance the visitor’s experience of The Humans…The generations interacting for keeps” in an apartment “where space reflects relationships, where rooms define connection.” And a bulletin board features a prompt: “One thing my family never talks about at Thanksgiving dinner is…” A few of the pinned responses: How none of us are actually enjoying it. Bio Dad. My niece’s alcoholism – everyone acts like falling on the floor is just normal. Sex. Whatever could potentially irk Dad. Things that actually matter.

Sponsored
Sponsored

The Humans

But after I left the theater, I found myself wishing there had been at least one more element to help me enter into the drama. Something about disaster. As it was, it was a solid day before it occurred to me that The Humans was less about its title — taken from the notion that when so-called monsters tell scary stories, it’s people that serve as the villains — and more about its setting: a basement apartment in New York City, just a little too close to where the towers fell on 9/11. Maybe that’s on me, but I’m not sure. I do know that I wasn’t alone in feeling like the show’s end wasn’t really a conclusion, that what I had witnessed was only the excavation of one family’s dysfunction, and not its exploration. And definitely not its confrontation.

Maybe it would have been different seeing the show in New York. Maybe Dad’s early-on mention of the disaster, bumping up against a mysterious and powerful thud from above that gets blamed on an elderly Chinese neighbor, would have been enough to set me on edge. To make all the ordinary family stuff that followed — the unasked-for advice, the drunken pot shots, the generational tensions — not about itself but about one man’s monstrous, unspoken anxiety. Things that actually matter. Whatever could potentially irk Dad. But here in San Diego, separated from the tragedy by 3000 miles and nearly 20 years, it was too easy to lump Dad’s complaint about location and proximity in with his general air of paternal criticism. (It’s Thanksgiving, and he’s visiting his daughter Brigid and her live-in boyfriend Richard in their new — read: old, barely furnished, and in need of work — apartment; what’s a Dad gonna do but check the football score on the spotty cell signal and trot out some Father Knows Best?) It was too easy to take the family drama at face value, to watch as the wine flowed and the truth came out, and to wait for the domestic fireworks. Wasn’t that the point of the subterranean roots framing the underground apartment? To let us know that this was about Ye Olde Family Tree?

Say this for the Blakes: they’re that rare stage family whose members actually love each other. When they talk about family being the important thing, the thing that endures, they mean it. They have their differences, but nobody’s seething; nobody’s looking to draw blood. That’s impressive, and it’s also convincingly portrayed, especially in the preservation of holiday traditions: the sung toast, the peppermint pig. But it also makes the proceedings feel broad — a joshing line like “Not even terrorists want to spend time in Philadelphia” could play on a network sitcom. And it makes the early-on eruptions of spite — Brigid answering her janitor father’s complaints about the place with “it’s not like you gave me any money to help me out” — feel jarring.

But of course, everyone’s got their share of troubles wearing away at the Thanksgiving bonhomie. Grandma has dementia. Mom is frustrated at work, and sad that her family doesn’t take her more concerns, religious and otherwise, seriously. Dad is soaking the sheets with night sweats. Daughter Aimee has colitis and consequent job trouble, and to top it off, her lover has left her. And daughter Brigid is trying to make it as a classical musician in New York. So yeah, things are bound to get tense, even explosive. But when they do, it’s not the characters that provide the drama — as villains or as heroes. It’s the setting. And while that setting is impressive — Chris Rynne’s lighting and Giulio Perrone’s set provide plenty of tension when called upon — it has a way of obscuring any sort of resolution among the humans. Which may be the point.

The latest copy of the Reader

Please enjoy this clickable Reader flipbook. Linked text and ads are flash-highlighted in blue for your convenience. To enhance your viewing, please open full screen mode by clicking the icon on the far right of the black flipbook toolbar.

Here's something you might be interested in.
Submit a free classified
or view all
Previous article

Last plane out of Seoul, 1950

Memories of a daring escape at the start of a war
The Humans: Thanksgiving in the shadow of no towers.
The Humans: Thanksgiving in the shadow of no towers.

San Diego Repertory Theatre’s production of Stephen Karam’s The Humans does a good deal of stage-setting before you even take your seat. A display by the box office provides “a behind-the scenes glimpse of the Scenic, Lighting, and Costume Design” for the show. The lobby walls feature an extensive exhibition of local artist Lauren LeVieux’s oil paintings, titled Presence: Time Through Structure, and designed to “enhance the visitor’s experience of The Humans…The generations interacting for keeps” in an apartment “where space reflects relationships, where rooms define connection.” And a bulletin board features a prompt: “One thing my family never talks about at Thanksgiving dinner is…” A few of the pinned responses: How none of us are actually enjoying it. Bio Dad. My niece’s alcoholism – everyone acts like falling on the floor is just normal. Sex. Whatever could potentially irk Dad. Things that actually matter.

Sponsored
Sponsored

The Humans

But after I left the theater, I found myself wishing there had been at least one more element to help me enter into the drama. Something about disaster. As it was, it was a solid day before it occurred to me that The Humans was less about its title — taken from the notion that when so-called monsters tell scary stories, it’s people that serve as the villains — and more about its setting: a basement apartment in New York City, just a little too close to where the towers fell on 9/11. Maybe that’s on me, but I’m not sure. I do know that I wasn’t alone in feeling like the show’s end wasn’t really a conclusion, that what I had witnessed was only the excavation of one family’s dysfunction, and not its exploration. And definitely not its confrontation.

Maybe it would have been different seeing the show in New York. Maybe Dad’s early-on mention of the disaster, bumping up against a mysterious and powerful thud from above that gets blamed on an elderly Chinese neighbor, would have been enough to set me on edge. To make all the ordinary family stuff that followed — the unasked-for advice, the drunken pot shots, the generational tensions — not about itself but about one man’s monstrous, unspoken anxiety. Things that actually matter. Whatever could potentially irk Dad. But here in San Diego, separated from the tragedy by 3000 miles and nearly 20 years, it was too easy to lump Dad’s complaint about location and proximity in with his general air of paternal criticism. (It’s Thanksgiving, and he’s visiting his daughter Brigid and her live-in boyfriend Richard in their new — read: old, barely furnished, and in need of work — apartment; what’s a Dad gonna do but check the football score on the spotty cell signal and trot out some Father Knows Best?) It was too easy to take the family drama at face value, to watch as the wine flowed and the truth came out, and to wait for the domestic fireworks. Wasn’t that the point of the subterranean roots framing the underground apartment? To let us know that this was about Ye Olde Family Tree?

Say this for the Blakes: they’re that rare stage family whose members actually love each other. When they talk about family being the important thing, the thing that endures, they mean it. They have their differences, but nobody’s seething; nobody’s looking to draw blood. That’s impressive, and it’s also convincingly portrayed, especially in the preservation of holiday traditions: the sung toast, the peppermint pig. But it also makes the proceedings feel broad — a joshing line like “Not even terrorists want to spend time in Philadelphia” could play on a network sitcom. And it makes the early-on eruptions of spite — Brigid answering her janitor father’s complaints about the place with “it’s not like you gave me any money to help me out” — feel jarring.

But of course, everyone’s got their share of troubles wearing away at the Thanksgiving bonhomie. Grandma has dementia. Mom is frustrated at work, and sad that her family doesn’t take her more concerns, religious and otherwise, seriously. Dad is soaking the sheets with night sweats. Daughter Aimee has colitis and consequent job trouble, and to top it off, her lover has left her. And daughter Brigid is trying to make it as a classical musician in New York. So yeah, things are bound to get tense, even explosive. But when they do, it’s not the characters that provide the drama — as villains or as heroes. It’s the setting. And while that setting is impressive — Chris Rynne’s lighting and Giulio Perrone’s set provide plenty of tension when called upon — it has a way of obscuring any sort of resolution among the humans. Which may be the point.

Comments
Sponsored

The latest copy of the Reader

Please enjoy this clickable Reader flipbook. Linked text and ads are flash-highlighted in blue for your convenience. To enhance your viewing, please open full screen mode by clicking the icon on the far right of the black flipbook toolbar.

Here's something you might be interested in.
Submit a free classified
or view all
Previous article

Classical Classical at The San Diego Symphony Orchestra

A concert I didn't know I needed
Next Article

Raging Cider & Mead celebrates nine years

Company wants to bring America back to its apple-tree roots
Comments
Ask a Hipster — Advice you didn't know you needed Big Screen — Movie commentary Blurt — Music's inside track Booze News — San Diego spirits Classical Music — Immortal beauty Classifieds — Free and easy Cover Stories — Front-page features Drinks All Around — Bartenders' drink recipes Excerpts — Literary and spiritual excerpts Feast! — Food & drink reviews Feature Stories — Local news & stories Fishing Report — What’s getting hooked from ship and shore From the Archives — Spotlight on the past Golden Dreams — Talk of the town The Gonzo Report — Making the musical scene, or at least reporting from it Letters — Our inbox Movies@Home — Local movie buffs share favorites Movie Reviews — Our critics' picks and pans Musician Interviews — Up close with local artists Neighborhood News from Stringers — Hyperlocal news News Ticker — News & politics Obermeyer — San Diego politics illustrated Outdoors — Weekly changes in flora and fauna Overheard in San Diego — Eavesdropping illustrated Poetry — The old and the new Reader Travel — Travel section built by travelers Reading — The hunt for intellectuals Roam-O-Rama — SoCal's best hiking/biking trails San Diego Beer — Inside San Diego suds SD on the QT — Almost factual news Sheep and Goats — Places of worship Special Issues — The best of Street Style — San Diego streets have style Surf Diego — Real stories from those braving the waves Theater — On stage in San Diego this week Tin Fork — Silver spoon alternative Under the Radar — Matt Potter's undercover work Unforgettable — Long-ago San Diego Unreal Estate — San Diego's priciest pads Your Week — Daily event picks
4S Ranch Allied Gardens Alpine Baja Balboa Park Bankers Hill Barrio Logan Bay Ho Bay Park Black Mountain Ranch Blossom Valley Bonita Bonsall Borrego Springs Boulevard Campo Cardiff-by-the-Sea Carlsbad Carmel Mountain Carmel Valley Chollas View Chula Vista City College City Heights Clairemont College Area Coronado CSU San Marcos Cuyamaca College Del Cerro Del Mar Descanso Downtown San Diego Eastlake East Village El Cajon Emerald Hills Encanto Encinitas Escondido Fallbrook Fletcher Hills Golden Hill Grant Hill Grantville Grossmont College Guatay Harbor Island Hillcrest Imperial Beach Imperial Valley Jacumba Jamacha-Lomita Jamul Julian Kearny Mesa Kensington La Jolla Lakeside La Mesa Lemon Grove Leucadia Liberty Station Lincoln Acres Lincoln Park Linda Vista Little Italy Logan Heights Mesa College Midway District MiraCosta College Miramar Miramar College Mira Mesa Mission Beach Mission Hills Mission Valley Mountain View Mount Hope Mount Laguna National City Nestor Normal Heights North Park Oak Park Ocean Beach Oceanside Old Town Otay Mesa Pacific Beach Pala Palomar College Palomar Mountain Paradise Hills Pauma Valley Pine Valley Point Loma Point Loma Nazarene Potrero Poway Rainbow Ramona Rancho Bernardo Rancho Penasquitos Rancho San Diego Rancho Santa Fe Rolando San Carlos San Marcos San Onofre Santa Ysabel Santee San Ysidro Scripps Ranch SDSU Serra Mesa Shelltown Shelter Island Sherman Heights Skyline Solana Beach Sorrento Valley Southcrest South Park Southwestern College Spring Valley Stockton Talmadge Temecula Tierrasanta Tijuana UCSD University City University Heights USD Valencia Park Valley Center Vista Warner Springs
Close

Anchor ads are not supported on this page.

This Week’s Reader This Week’s Reader