A Good Day to Me Not to You, Kogod Cradle, Arena Stage, Washington, DC
Constance Zayroun in A Good Day to Me Not to You in the Kogod Cradle at Arena Stage, through May 3. Photo credit: Daniel Rader.
A Good Day to Me Not to You (into which I would desperately like to insert a comma), the title of Arena Stage’s current offering by Lameece Issaq in its Kogod Cradle space, draws its title from a conversation conveyed by the central character early in the play. In a bit of conflict with a woman whose space she has disturbed, the offended one wants to ensure that the woman infringing on her space understands that she is by no means wishing “a good day” to the offender, but only to herself. That contretemps is just one of many our central character will relate to us during the 90 minutes in which we, her audience, become her confidante and to whom she will relate the story of her life in intimate and sometimes painful detail.
The playwright keeps her anonymous – the program calls her
“the Narrator.” She doesn’t even have a name, or, if she does, finds it too
personal to share. “Storyteller” would be more apt, I think, since she is the
central character in the narrative she relates.
A single, fortysomething woman, she was once an aspiring
dentistry student before a severe case of vertigo caused her to drop out. Now,
though, she is a former dental lab technician with an extraordinary interest in
the size, shape, and shade of the cuspids, bicuspids, molars, and incisors of
all she encounters. She has been fired from her job in part because of her
unhealthy obsession with the models and molds of the dental paraphernalia which
she helps to create. A sequence of events has unfolded which has desperately
changed her living circumstances. She has been booted from her happy existence
as surrogate mother to the child whose birth caused her late sister’s death
five years before (for reasons to be understood later). She has taken up
residence in the house of St. Agnes. Once a convent, the building now serves as
a mostly-temporary home for single women. As a result of the house’s
affiliation with the Roman Catholic Church, the house has an extensive and
cumbersome list of rules to which she must adhere, though the simple bottom
line to the rules is: No men. She is at the end of her metaphorical rope,
though there is one bright light at the bottom line: where else could she find
an Upper West Side apartment in New York for $400 a month?
St. Agnes, we learn, is venerated as a martyr committed to
innocence and virginity, but we are also told that she is the saint of sexual
abuse survivors – understandable, but most likely not something being
publicized in the early centuries of the last millennium. Among those our
heroine meets in the house of St. Agnes are two nuns, one of whom (Sister John)
she had feared early on, but with whom she develops an intimate, respectful
relationship. Sister John’s backstory causes our heroine to question her own
ideas about religion and the church, a place that can be painful but also
reassuring. We meet a variety of other characters, including two men: James,
the fellow dental student with whom she had once imagined a future, and the
mysterious “Gabe,” who fulfills a need governed by her ideas of what is
expected of women, though it will end in painful disappointment.
The play is often riotously funny, though moments later it
is heartbreakingly poignant. Our heroine is a flawed individual whose
questionable life choices have brought her to the point at which we meet her. Bit
by bit, the onion is peeled until we see the inner storyteller at her most
personal and vulnerable level.
Playwright Issaq starred in the original New York production
of the play at the Waterwell Theatre Company, which accounts in part for its
creation as a one-woman show, a genuine smorgasbord of emotions that provide a
talented actor with a feast of material. I assume that parts of the story she
shares were real events in her life. Now the very talented Constance Zaytoun
takes on the role with such honest and natural delivery, it is as if she is
sharing her own story.
Constance Zayroun in A Good Day to Me Not to You in the Kogod Cradle at Arena Stage, through May 3. Photo credit: Daniel Rader.
While I can appreciate this as a monologue, I can’t help but
imagine a more traditional play that might have been, which might have used a
handful of actors playing multiple roles, appearing in vignettes revealing
events as they occur in the present and the past.
The Kogod Cradle is the most intimate (and least often used)
of the three theatres at Arena Stage, and it provides the perfect environment
for a one-person show. Even so, Zaytoun, under the direction of Lee Sunday
Evans uses a great deal of the space. Peiyi Wong has designed a space that is
simultaneously generic and blank, with its religiosity revealed subtly by the
presence of elements of Christian iconography. Jian Jung has designed a layered
costume that, like the play, peels away to reveal a woman wearing just a
t-shirt and jeans. Mextly Couzin’s lighting design is used to maximum effect,
highlighting moments and moods, adding suspense, with what appears to be a
miraculous lighting of candles on high shelves, more than once. Avi Amon is
credited as composer and sound designer, further enhancing the material. Even
though this is a one-woman show, it obviously “takes a village” to put it all
on stage.
A Good Day to You Not to Me continues at Arena Stage
through May 3. Content advisories: the production uses adult language with
verbal mentions of the following topics: sexual assault, sexual acts,
child endangerment, miscarriage, sex work, STIs, and mental health
institutionalization.
Constance Zayroun in A Good Day to Me Not to You in the Kogod Cradle at Arena Stage, through May 3. Photo credit: Tony Powell.
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