Over cocktails in a perfectly pleasant 1950s living room, we meet Bob (Zach Christensen) and Norma (Ariel Pinkerton), who work for the US State Department. Along with their spouses, Millie (Courtney Matula) and Jim (Tony Burton), respectively, they're also next-door neighbors and friends. But they're hiding a secret - all four of them are gay, and the real loving couples are Bob and Jim, and Norma and Millie. They are literally in the closet; they sneak back and forth between their connected Georgetown duplex homes through a coat closet. The faux heterosexual marriages allows them to live their private lives as they wish, while continuing to live and work in a society that doesn't accept homosexuality. It's the "perfect arrangement," except that they're living a lie and can only be their true selves alone behind closed doors. The situation becomes untenable when Bob and Norma's boss (Daniel Hildebrand) instructs them to look for and weed out not just communists, as they have been doing, but also "deviants." Bob is convinced he can control the situation, while Norma does what she can to protect people. Adding to the complicated mix is the boss' less than bright wife (Alison Anderson) that the women have to entertain, and Millie's former fling (Katie Wodele), now a fellow State Department employee in danger, who threatens to expose them if she's not given her job back. All four members of this arrangement are forced to make choices, to decide if they want to continue living a lie, or be honest about who they are, suffering the immediate consequences in the hopes that it will eventually make things better for them, and those who come after them.
Ariel Pinkerton, Alison Anderson, and Katie Wodele (photo by Christina Morgeneier) |
Kudos to Theatre in the Round, the oldest theater in Minneapolis, for ending their 70th (yes, 70th!) season with this smart, funny, thought-provoking, devastating play that addresses relevant and timely social issues. They also have some special programming to go along with this play selection, including post-show discussions with experts and an exhibit in the lobby on Minnesota LGBTQ+ history. Visit their website for all of the details and to purchase tickets.