Citadel Theatre Presents ELEMENO PEA -Review — Two Sisters, Two Worlds

Citadel Theatre ELEMENO PEA
Sarah Hecht, Grayson Heyl, Maggie Kettering and Nic Fantl in Citadel Theatre's ELEMENO PEA by Molly Smith Metzler Photo by North Shore Camera Club

This show isn’t a sister act – it’s a sister who may or may not be acting.

In the opening scene of Molly Smith Metzler’s entertaining ELEMENO PEA at Citadel Theatre, Devon doesn’t know what to make of her little sister Simone. Raised humbly in Buffalo, NY, they’re about to spend time together in a luxurious beachfront estate on Martha’s Vineyard. How deep, wonders Devon, is Simone into this world of privilege and excess?

A one-time social worker, 35-year-old Devon now works as a minimum wage “alley coordinator” at a chain restaurant and lives in their mother’s basement. An aspiring but frustrated novelist, 29-year-old Simone now earns six figures as the personal assistant to Michaela, the needy wife of a billionaire. Thanks to Michaela’s beneficence, Simone has the weekend off to reconnect with Devon.  

ELEMENO PEA’s multiple dichotomies

Simone shows Devon around the fabulous guest house with giddy pride. Not only is there a voice-activated music system and pricey single-malt Scotch, there’s also Jos-B, the Latino groundskeeper, to fix the outdoor shower and fetch lobsters. The cherry on Simone’s success sundae is Ethan, her rich new boyfriend who happens to be Michaela’s husband’s best friend.

Devon isn’t buying any of this. “You’re the help,” she reminds Simone. And that designer ensemble her sister is wearing? “You look like a retarded Easter egg.”

Citadel Theatre ELEMENO PEA
Sarah Hecht and Nic Fantl in Citadel Theatre's ELEMENO PEA Photo by North Shore Camera Club

Recalling a childhood memory in which one of them mistook the alphabet’s L-M-N-O-P as “elemeno pea,” they now face a multitude of dichotomies. Inherited wealth vs subsistence wages. Surface charm vs smoldering anger. Wisecracks vs honest feelings. Aspirations vs realities. Can Devon and Simone share a bond when their lives are so divided between the spoiled haves and the struggling have-nots?

Citadel Theatre ELEMENO PEA
Maggie Kettering and Sarah Hecht in Citadel Theatre's ELEMENO PEA Photo by North Shore Camera Club
Citadel Theatre ELEMENO PEA
Maggie Kettering and Grayson Heyl in Citadel Theatre's ELEMENO PEA. Photo by North Shore Camera Club

Citadel Theatre’s production moves towards authenticity

The gulf between them widens when Michaela unexpectedly appears at the sliding glass doors of the guest house. She’s not even supposed to be on the island. Exacting husband Peter, who insists that Jos-B scrape barnacles off the pier and Michaela pluck every stray hair from her chin, has forced her out of his car. Bit by bit, as Citadel’s production moves towards some much-needed authenticity, the reason that Michaela was ejected from his Jaguar becomes clear.

Michaela and Peter have suffered a significant trauma, one that money could not prevent and which has destroyed the marriage. Yet the event’s profound emotions are commodified. Early on, Michaela describes herself as “premium pussy.” Later, Ethan informs her that Peter no longer considers her “a sound investment.” She is out. As her situation changes, all others are forced to reevaluate their own.

 

Broad strokes and subtle interactions

Maggie Kettering plays Devon with natural ease and confidence. After a glib start, Grayson Heyl as Michaela finds the soul of a lonely woman who has acquired much but loses much more. Sarah Hecht (Simone), Nic Fantl (Ethan) and Ray Andrecheck (Jos-B) tend to push the more obvious aspects of their characters. But Metzler’s script is a mix of sitcom broad strokes and subtle interactions that are sometimes at odds with each other. Keeping up with those shifts must be challenging for director Ellen Phelps and her cast. Over time, they may all slow down a bit and discover more tears beneath the one-liners.

Citadel Theatre ELEMENO PEA
Grayson Heyl in Citadel Theatre's ELEMENO PEA. Photo by North Shore Camera Club

RECOMMENDED

WHEN:

Now through March 5

Thursdays at 7:30 PM
Fridays and Saturdays at 8:00 PM
Sundays at 3:00 PM
February 8 & 22 at 11:00 AM

WHERE:

Citadel Theatre
300 S. Waukegan Road
Lake Forest, IL

TICKETS:

$35-38
(847) 735-8554
www.CitadelTheatre.org

 

 

Note:  An excerpt of this review appears in Theatre in Chicago.

 

About the Author

Susan Lieberman is a playwright, journalist and script consultant who commits most of her waking hours to Chicago theatre. Her Jeff-winning play Arrangement for Two Violas will be published by Chicago Dramaworks in spring 2017.

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