At the start of This Is Government, written by Nina Kissinger and directed by Sarah Norris, three young adults sit in a drab congressional office (nicely realized by Daniel Allen). Against the back wall are a dozen or so file cabinets, some piled horizontally on others. Kaz, the badly paid staff assistant, is busy working; the other two, Emi and Tip, even worse paid interns, are pretty much farting around.
In front: Vann Dukes, Kleo Mitrokostas, Charles Hsu. In back: Susan Lynskey. Photo: Burdette Parks |
While Kaz (the excellent Vann Dukes) tries to convince the interns to demonstrate even a hint of professionalism, Emi and Tip remain focused on why the supposedly decent congressman they work for seems to be turning his back on an important health bill (Kaz says it's just political maneuvering). They also talk a lot about Stevie, a frequent caller desperate for a few minutes with the congressman. She also wants to chat, and Tip enjoys their conversations. Stevie has only good things to say about "the phone people."
This beginning of the play is reasonably interesting but generic. The banter is only occasionally amusing, and the uneven acting doesn't add much.
Then a lockdown is announced in response to a threat to the Capitol. Kaz, Emi, and Tip are stuck in their small office for hours with little in the way of food or comfort. Even after the Capitol is evacuated of congresspeople, the people in the other buildings--the nobodies, like this threesome--remain locked in.
To their astonishment, it turns out that Stevie is the source of the threat. Until now the audience has only heard about Stevie, but now we get to meet her--and now the show really starts. Playwright Kissinger does her best writing for Stevie, making her real in a way the others just aren't. In addition, Susan Lynskey's performance as Stevie is extraordinary, full of humanity, subtle, and perfectly pitched. Just watching Lynskey do her stuff is by far the highlight of the evening.
This Is Government is reasonably good--there's some funny stuff, nice moments, and entertaining direction, with an underlying desire to say real, important, things about politics. But the show would be far more powerful, I think, if the interns were more fully developed and the opening section were cut in half.
Wendy Caster







