Rogue Machine at the Matrix Theatre
I’ve known playwright-on-the-rise Tim Venable since he was a young struggling actor waiting tables and not all that much older than the characters he's created in Rogue Machine’s current world premiere of Adolescent Salvation, the third of his plays debuting with the celebrated company over the last few years and the second directed by the Machine’s artistic director Guillermo Cienfuegos.
The first, debuting in 2022, was Beautiful People, featuring two disgruntled and emotionally disenfranchised suburban teenagers growing up in the 1990s who decide to risk their parents’ wrath and stay up all night on a school night in one of the boys’ basement bedrooms as they compete for top positioning in their two-person social order—and to contemplate the ultimate challenge facing young people in our increasingly mucked-up nation’s out of control gun culture.
Venable’s fast-moving first play was startlingly and horrifically real, providing a glimpse into how too many of our children have been raised in the toxic environment of contemporary American life. Now Venable has brought that kind of collective teenage angst and dysfunction into the present day where most of the issues addressed have only become more twisted and omnipresent.
Venable’s plays, at least so far, have dealt with the convoluted journey of teens and young people in America, yet they have nothing in common with the idyllic world past of Father Knows Best or Love Finds Andy Hardy. They are plays about hope and hopelessness in our dystopian society.
With proper attribution for the title as a passage from my generation’s inimitable poetess/songwriter counter-culture goddess Patti Smith in her 2010 memoir Just Kids (“I immersed myself in books and rock ‘n roll, the adolescent salvation”), Venable’s newest work of provocative contemporary art this time deals with three emotionally stunted teens having a most disastrous sleepover.
The evening has been arranged by a recently divorced alcoholic mother (Jenny Flack) so her neglected kid Natasha (a remarkable turn by Caroline Rodriguez) might be able to get out of her introverted shell and make friends with the far more socially aggressive daughter of her drinking buddy while the two mothers frequent the only accessible local bar.
Natasha isn’t all that crazy about the unexpected guest (Alexandra Lee) being thrust upon her privacy, especially since Taylor could be the definition of that familiar angry and outspoken teenage bitch supreme. Luckily, she has brought along her best friend, also named Taylor (Michael Guarasci), a sweet young gay boy who somehow manages to continually soften the continually caustic comments of his BFF.
As was the case with Venable’s second play, Baby Foot, which dealt with two other mismatched people trying to boost one another while wading through the snarl of drug rehab—I’ve only heard since I missed seeing it—Adolescent Salvation is staged in the Machine’s tiny second space above the Matrix lobby, a kind of renovated attic perfect for costume storage that has now been utilized for several highly successful productions.
The in-your-face intimacy of their 35-seat Henry Murray Stage has had magical results with the productions I’ve seen performed there, especially Sophie Swithinbank’s riveting two-person Bacon earlier this year, which actually had the smell-worthy aroma of our favorite culinary obsession wafting through the space as rashers were slowly cooked right behind the audience’s heads.
This time out, however, I think the choice of presenting Adolescent Salvation in the cramped reinvented storeroom might have been a mistake—especially during a massive heatwave on a Sunday sfternoon. What initially was certainly unique, staging yet another entire play in this space is becoming somewhat gimmicky.
The imaginative set design by Joel Daavid is incredibly visceral, depicting Natasha’s cramped and memorabilia-crowded bedroom and includes a walk through her closet beginning when entering the first floor staircase leading to the theatre upstairs. Although dodging hanging clothes and contemplating an eclectic array of teenaged treasures is absolutely ingenious, once you’re seated, it becomes more cumbersome than exciting.
The problem is the action in this minuscule playing space needs to revolve around Natasha’s bed and there’s simply not enough room to maneuver around it without making audience members have to pull in their feet and wince as sudden movement and violent action (well choreographed by Ned Mochel) unfolds too close for comfort, even if making us squirm in our seats is part of the desired effect.
Where such a thing has aided and even enhanced other productions mounted in the Murray, here it's somehow more distracting than propitious. Perhaps the “stage center” placement of two matronly overdressed and obviously shocked older ladies sitting about a foot from the bed, their reactions in full view of of the rest of the audience, exacerbated my reaction here, especially when about halfway through the performance they found it okay to start loudly whispering to one another.
The subtle performance of Rodriguez is absolutely revelatory, completely riveting in her ability to stay totally focused and in the moment no matter what the challenge, and her eleventh-hour scene with Flack as her significantly toasted mother returns home from the local Margaritaville offers the best acting and best writing in the production.
As the two Taylors, I found both actors less successful, each intent on hammerng in their characters’ individual traits in case we don’t get it. While Guarasci plays it stereotypically light-in-the-loafers, losing the dearness of what a sweetheart his Taylor really is, Lee’s sharp-tounged, eye-rolling performance is so one-note it results in not caring much about what happens to her. One last scene where her Taylor redeems herself as a potentially sympathetic friend after all comes too late and inadvertently hints at what the actor has been missing all along.
As a surprise and mostly uncredited fifth character, Keith Stevenson could really be good and actually does manage to become a sympathetic figure when his conduct should leave him to be something of a villain—although not to me personally since I’ve found myself in my life in a similar situation. Still, Stevenson’s inaudibility in his one scene is exceedingly frustrating. The Murray Stage might be crazily intimate, but lines still must be delivered with enough clarity and projection to be heard.
Still, Venable’s Adolescent Salvation is a raw, jarringly disturbing play, an unbridled view of what our fucked-up country and its plethora of self-absorbed absentee parents have done to emotionally destroy our own future generations.
We as a society have passed on a culture of misogyny and violence that has dehumanized and robotized our young, from our entertainment options that proudly boast the number of people who are blown away by gun violence to our bloviated and bigoted opinions overheard at the family dinner table while discussing our dastardly, elaborately self-destructive choices in elected officials too egocentric to consider the future of our dying planet.
Unfortunately, none of this emerges as an Orwellian science-fictionalized warning. The exceptional gifts of Tim Venable, so brilliantly chronicling who we are and what we as a people have become, is sadly not that difficult to imagine.
Just turn on the evening news.