Playwrights’ Arena and the Victory Theatre Center
The first scene in Nicholas Pilapil’s intriguing new two-hander is actually what normally would be the last. It depicts the end of a beautiful decade-long relationship, leaving us an entire play to unravel what went wrong.
And that, dear reader, is the frustrating thing about Pilapil’s Luca & Uri, now world premiering at the Little Victory, because the answer is: nothing. There’s nothing wrong—or wrong enough—to make these bright and strong survivors give up so cavalierly on a love as perfect and worth saving as theirs.
Luca (Roland Ruiz) and Uri (Kurt Kanazawa) meet serendipitously at a party and instantly feel that old inexplicable zap of electricity they can only attribute to “kismet.” Luca jokingly tells Uri he’s intrigued by his “mirthful lack of charm” while Uri counters by wondering how the more practical and grounded Luca “could be so white.”
In the play’s sweetest and most satisfying moments, simple everyday joys such as when the lovers share their happiness over receiving a free container of sticky rice from their favorite takeout place, prove theirs clearly is a match made in theatrical heaven.
Within a day they’re smackdab in the middle of a nearly idyllic relationship despite Uri’s reluctance to believe such a thing could happen and, as magically conjured by Pilapil, their immediately intense feelings for each other are gloriously real and certainly something worth cheering on.
The unlikelihood of such a love at first sight kind of bond sweeping them both off their feet so rapidly is made plausible by the lovely, gossamer dialogue that makes it clear right away that such a thing is possible. Both men share a sense of humor and intellectual curiosity as well as, although it’s hard to explain, the ability to express themselves with the same rhythms, if you will.
Still, the rule of opposites attract is quite in evidence too. Luca is a commonsensical science professor with his feet firmly planted in academia, while Uri is a somewhat flighty postgraduate student studying mythology and folklore with an emphasis on queerness.
Their relationship may be based on a magnetic mutual attraction that initially circumvents their differences, but as their story unfolds from the ending to the beginning and then flashes at breakneck speed back and forth through key moments in the relationship, both their philosophical and practical differences keep them butting heads on a regular basis—that is when they’re not hot-bloodedly butting their other heads, if you receive my meaning (with a well-deserved nod to intimacy director Giovanni Ortega).
This constantly shifting timeline proves confusing at times, especially because the lovers’ aforementioned viewpoints often shift and frustratingly directly take on the others’ point of view—yet never at the same time. Thankfully, director Jon Lawrence Rivera stages the mercurial colliding events smoothly and often playfully, keeping the two lone actors with so much dependent on their skills moving and connecting with great passion and liveliness.
The frequent filmic changes of place and time handled by Kanazawa and Ruiz in blue light can get a bit tiresome and sometimes unnecessarily too complex, which made me long for a larger playing space than the Victory Center’s cramped second stage, but this is a small druther in an otherwise electric presentation.
Under Rivera’s exacting eye for tapping into our often self-destructive and labyrinthine human condition, these two exceptional actors keep our interest riveted on their characters’ journey, though all the while wary since we are privy to how things devolve over their decade together.
Kanazawa and Ruiz have an uncanny ability to make us totally believe these are two people deeply in love trying desperately to stay connected despite the outside distractions of their careers and their individual maturation. Without these two exceptional actors and a director as keenly sensitive, Pilapil’s tale, even with his poetic language, could easily descend into melodrama.
All that said—and I picture my dear friend Jon Rivera on his well-deserved vacation lying out by the pool in his hotel in Hoi An saying, “Uh-oh, here it comes”—I did have one lingering quandary that dogged me watching Pilapil’s otherwise lovely, beautifully evocative play.
I try in my reviews not to give away plot points that should be left for the viewer to watch unfold but this time out, since the play begins with that concluding scene showing the couple breaking up, I guess I shouldn’t worry.
See, as much as I came to care for the characters of Luca and Uri, and as well directed, designed, and performed Pilapil’s tender love story was in the quest to bring it to life, in the final analysis the play felt devoid of a reason it needed to be told.
The fact is these two intelligent and well-matched lovers wanted to deserve, as Uri tells Luca, the “life I want to live,” I found it frustrating and unnecessary that in the end they were not allowed to find that together. Theirs is clearly a love not to give up on.
I truly believe great and true love can conquer anything and so, in that regard, perhaps I’m not capable of being as objective as I should be in the midst of sharing the most important and improbable love of my own in my often thorny time clinging for dear life on our wildly spinning planet.
Any relationship takes a lot of patience and the ability to make ridiculously hard concessions, so the fact that Luca wants to end things after many years working diligently to make it work left me feeling the play misses a satisfying resolution. Saying he wants to sever their relationship because he’s destroyed Uri’s dreams and feels he’s responsible for his lover abandoning searching for his personal windmills is an argument all too familiar to me.
I’ve spent the last 13 years fighting the same concerns, that as someone far older than the person I cherish more than anything else ever in my life, I’m holding him back from a future he deserves—and perhaps from finding a love that won’t be gone from his life far too soon.
Every time I dip into the quagmire of this emotional quicksand and try to convince my partner he should be looking for someone closer to his age with whom he’d have the ability to grow and mature alongside, he just rolls his eyes, calls me a silly goose, and we move on—together.
As much as I loved Nicholas Pilapil’s gossamer yet somehow hollow and heartbreaking Luca & Uri, watching this couple painfully go their separate ways was a huge letdown.
Instead of walking away and leaving Luca with tears streaming as he faces a solitary life, I wish Uri would have instead turned back at the last minute and asked, “So, what do you want for dinner?”
After all, I bet they still had a coupon or two for a free order of sticky rice from their favorite Thai place.
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ADDENDUM: Well! All is not lost in the world after all! There’s a quick tableau at the very end showing Luca and Uri sitting together looking forward in silence with their arms draped around one another. I took it as meant to be another out of time moment recalling better days for the couple but au contraire!
Over his yummy-looking Vietnamese breakfast in Hoi An, Jon Rivera texted: “It's a hard ending, because the final scene is an epilogue, two years later after they got married. Uri shows his hand with a ring at the end. For better or worse, they are together!”
I told Jon it was a shame since this is live theatre they couldn’t have added a cartoon arrow floating in the air pointing at Uri’s ring finger. Maybe Pilapil should consider my “What’s for dinner?” line after all!