‘Jenny Chow’ takes theater into the cyber world at SCR
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Tom Titus
With Rolin Jones’ “The Intelligent Design of Jenny Chow” now enjoying
its world premiere at South Coast Repertory’s Julianne Argyros
Theater , the theater has officially entered cyberspace. What lies
ahead, one can only imagine.
Playwright Jones, a 30-year-old Yale Drama School student,
possesses a prodigious imagination, not to mention a fluency in
cyberspeak, which could boggle the minds of the more seasoned members
of his audience. Fortunately, he’s created some provocative
characters to inject periodic doses of humanity between all the bits
and bytes.
Where he misses the mark is where most playwrights encounter
pitfalls in their earlier works -- in pulling his story together with
a cogent and satisfactory conclusion.
It’s the same flaw that mars the otherwise excellent “Intimate
Apparel” by Lynn Nottage, now being staged on SCR’s Segerstrom Stage
-- unsurprising, since Jones studied under Nottage during his
creation of “Jenny Chow.” (He even sneaks her name into his play’s
dialogue.)
With an imaginative approach reminiscent of an early Steven
Spielberg, Jones has crafted a balanced piece alternating among
comedy, drama and passages only a true computer geek could fathom.
Director David Chambers takes this eclectic menage and transforms it
into a richly imaginative production.
“Jenny Chow” actually doesn’t make her appearance until late in
the first act -- as the robotic creation of a housebound young woman,
Jennifer Marcus -- Chinese by birth, American by adoption -- who is
determined to find her birth mother. A formidable task, since leaving
her Calabasas house, let alone venturing to China, is a traumatic
experience of the first order.
Behind her computer, however, Jennifer can conquer the universe --
or at least create a new life form. Going Dr. Frankenstein one
better, she uses various imported components to manufacture a girl in
her own image who will represent her in her familial quest, and who
doesn’t need a plane to fly across the Pacific.
Melody Butiu in the central role of Jennifer thrusts her
interpretive engine into overdrive to deliver this sassy, conflicted
character with her elevated strengths and abysmal weaknesses. Butiu’s
stage energy sparkles throughout, even when her character’s tank is
running on the fumes toward the end of the play. It’s a dream role,
and Butiu soars with it.
Another terrific performance is rendered by SCR regular Linda
Gehringer as Jennifer’s Type A adoptive mom (who doubles as her real
mother in China). William Francis McGuire is believable as her
sympathetic but clueless dad, an unemployed house husband who now
amuses himself watching meteor showers.
Stealing his scenes in a variety of supporting roles is J.D.
Cullum, who represents all of Jennifer’s scientific compatriots and
is particularly pungent as Dr. Yakunin, a mad scientist if ever there
was one. Daniel Blinkoff is her more down-to-earth buddy, a
semi-stoned pizza delivery guy who’s fluent in Valley speak.
Jenny Chow herself (itself?) is presented in succeeding stages of
robotic advancement by April Hong, who’s transported across the ocean
with a logic that would baffle the most advanced technophile. Hong’s
gradual infusions of humanity are skillfully delivered in a
delightful performance.
It’s after the mission is accomplished that Jones’ program
requires rebooting. An artificial conflict is followed by a fuzzy
resolution, which is unfortunate, since the production soars up to
that point.
A bit of cramming with his former professor, Nottage (whose own
play could stand some firming up at the conclusion, too), would do
both playwrights a world of good.
* TOM TITUS’ reviews run Thursdays and Saturdays.
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