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Pride in the Falls of Autrey Mill at Signature Theatre

Jordan Wright
October 27, 2013
Special to The Alexandria Times
 

I’m still trying to puzzle out what the play’s title is supposed to mean.  It has nothing to do with autumn or waterfalls and even less to do with the decline of a city called Autrey Mill.  And the word “pride” doesn’t begin to sum up the complex neuroses of this dysfunctional family.  So with little clue as to what to expect from playwright Paul Downs Colaizzo’s latest comic drama, I entered the theatre as curious as a cat.

Suburban housewife Carly (Christine Lahti, left) makes a discovery about her son Chad (Anthony Bowden) in Pride in the Falls of Autrey Mill - Photo: Margot Schulman.

Suburban housewife Carly (Christine Lahti, left) makes a discovery about her son Chad (Anthony Bowden) in Pride in the Falls of Autrey Mill – Photo: Margot Schulman.

The play opens onto a set furnished by Better Homes & Gardens or at least one that appears that way.  Carly is having a sit-down with her college-age son Chad who has revealed to her that he is gay and has a steady boyfriend.  She is surprised and disdainful, though far more interested in exploring the dynamics of his relationship.   “Who pays the check?” she demands to know in an attempt to determine which role he plays.  “If you pay the check, that makes you the man!” she chides him.  “You coulda been president!” she insists in yet another attempt to belittle him.  That’s how perfectionist Carly deals with news she doesn’t want to hear.  Sweep it under the rug and then put a more palatable spin on it.  The approval of their country club cronies is far more important to her than her own family’s feelings.

For a woman who has spent her entire adult life as a stay-at-home mom with an absentee traveling salesman husband, Carly has her own convoluted set of values.  A control freak who idealizes her family as she denies them their individualism, she compiles lists of appropriate girls for her sons to date.  When asked, “What’s for dinner?” she describes her seven-course meal listing all the gourmet ingredients.

Suburban housewife Carly (Christine Lahti, right) touches base with her husband Louie (Wayne Duvall) in Pride in the Falls of Autrey Mill - Photo: Margot Schulman.

Suburban housewife Carly (Christine Lahti, right) touches base with her husband Louie (Wayne Duvall) in Pride in the Falls of Autrey Mill – Photo: Margot Schulman.

No, this is not a rewrite of Arthur Miller’s “Death of a Salesman” though it has overtones of it and Sam Mendes movie “American Beauty” too.  It is a wry, tongue-in-cheek satire on the decline of the American family in all of its modern suburbanite splendor.  A popular topic if ever there was.  Tolstoy’s Anna Karenina nailed it when she said, “All happy families are alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.”

Bulimia, homosexuality, incest, overeating, cheating, emotional detachment, parental disapproval, alcohol and drugs.  Just your typical middle class family, Colaizzo seems to say.  “We’re just letting our dreams die, Mom,” Chad sagely observes.

“Pride in the Falls of Autrey Mill” is without nuance.  It’s a straightforward, emotionally charged play loaded with piercing insults and laugh-out-loud satire.  But ultimately it’s the humor that Colaizzo puts into this play that makes it palatable  – – the nail-in-the-coffin retorts, the relatable characters we can tsk-tsk from a distance.  And ultimately we are drawn to the train wreck and the exquisitely satisfying schadenfreude of watching other people’s vulnerabilities tweaked and prodded.

Brothers Chad (Anthony Bowden, left) and Tommy (Christopher McFarland) sneak a moment’s peace in the bathroom of their childhood home in Pride in the Falls of Autrey Mill - Photo: Margot Schulman.

Brothers Chad (Anthony Bowden, left) and Tommy (Christopher McFarland) sneak a moment’s peace in the bathroom of their childhood home in Pride in the Falls of Autrey Mill – Photo: Margot Schulman.

Christine Lahti plays Carly like a tail-swishing cat, ready to pounce.  She is riveting in her depiction of the uptight, social doyenne and a perfect contrast to Wayne Duvall’s laid back Southern breadwinner, Louie, who balances out that tension with a restrained yet effective portrayal of her husband who harbors other ideas for his happiness.  Terrific performances by both Anthony Bowden as Chad, and Christopher McFarland as Tommy who bears the brunt of couple’s disappointment.

Through December 8th at Signature Theatre (Shirlington Village), 4200 Campbell Avenue, Arlington, VA 22206.  For tickets and information call 703 820-9771 or visit www.signature-theatre.org.

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