"A smart, sharp comedy that asks the important questions about privilege and who is allowed to fail." This tagline on the cover of the program pretty well describes the new play A Jumping-Off Point, receiving its regional premiere at the Jungle Theater. It's the kind of play that I love, one in which complex characters discuss relevant issues in a personal and relatable way, with no easy answers, no winners or losers. And the issues discussed are ones on the forefront of current conversation - who has the right to tell whose story? It's no longer acceptable for a writer to tell the story of a community they're not a part of, particularly a marginalized community. People in that community have the right to tell their own story, something we've only just begun to realize and put into practice. But does that make it OK to steal someone else's idea and "make it better?" Those are the thorny issues that this excellent three-person cast, savvy director, and brilliant design team dig into in just 90 minutes. Buckle your seat belts, not just to make it through Uptown construction to see this play at the Jungle through May 19, but also to navigate the twists and turns of this story.
Just five years out of grad school, Leslie is living every playwright's dream - her play was a success on Broadway, and now she's developing it for an HBO series (Max, actually). Life is going great, until her grad school classmate Andrew sends her an email. Her BFF Mirian can see she's thrown by it, but Leslie won't admit to why. When Andrew shows up on her doorstop, we learn that she stole his grad school thesis to write her play. Or in her words, she used it as "a jumping-off point" to develop a story that was all her own. As a Black woman, she believed she was the more appropriate person to write about the Black community in the Mississippi delta than a White man who heard a story about it on MPR. Maybe that's true, but Andrew, who is struggling in his life, wants to be acknowledged and even rewarded for his contribution. There begins an awkward, tenuous, forced relationship between these two, as Leslie tries to continue to tell her story within the restrictions of the studio and TV executives, and Andrew tries to write what he knows.
Leslie (Vinecia Coleman) and Andrew (Gabriel Murphy) in the writers' room (photo by Lauren B. Photography) |
is it weird that I kind of want to live in this room? (photo by Lauren B. Photography) |
If you like smartly written, crisply designed, well acted, relevant and thought-provoking 90-minute-no-intermision plays, A Jumping-Off Point is the one for you! See it Wednesdays through Sundays at the Jungle Theater in Uptown through May 19 (all tickets pay-as-you-are).