Geffen Playhouse
A new play about struggling with addiction, dealing with cognitively aging grandparents, and winning back a parent who’s given up on you. Sounds like a laugh a minute, doesn’t it? Well, surprisingly, it is.
The world premiere of The Reservoir at the Geffen heralds the auspicious professional playwrighting debut of Jake Brasch, someone with a unique ability to reveal more autobiographical shit about himself than even Jonathan Safran Foer could call forth—and who with this play instantly emerges as a major dramatist with a career to watch as it rockets to the heights.
On Takeshi Taka’s minimalist abstract set possibly meant to conjure a CT-scan slide of Brasch’s brain, The Reservoir begins as the writer’s alter-ego Josh (Jake Horowitz in a phenomenal, marathon performance) wakes up on the shore of a Denver reservoir with coughed-up schmutz caked on down the front of his Cosby sweater and little idea how he got there.
Having taken a medical leave from NYU, where’s he’s been a theatre major considering writing a queer-themed 12-step-oriented musical called Rock Bottom, it seems Josh instinctively headed home to Colorado to see if he could once again get sober with the help of his family. His long-suffering mother (Marin Hinkle) has been through this process many times before with her chronically alcoholic mess of a son, however, and isn’t exactly anxious to open her arms for another dose of heartache.
Josh turns to his grandparents for solace and acceptance, but in doing so realizes both sets of his eclectic elders are overwhelmed by problems of their own.
All four of his once-sharply focused grandparents are in the midst of some degree of cognitive decline and Josh, in an effort to save himself through becoming a champion determined to help slow their symptoms, discovers the concept of Cognitive Reserve, a theory that by keeping the mind and body challenged, the descent into dementia and Alzheimer’s can be diminished.
Of course, this is an admirable mission, but is it more about distracting himself to keep him from drinking vanilla extract by the bottle than it is saving them?
It’s obvious and hardly a secret that Brasch is writing about his own recovery and his own struggles with sobriety and finding his way through questions regarding his sexuality, his sense of worth, and trying to unravel how his Jewish roots figure into his battle against those incessant demons.
Creating this amazing work of incredibly personal art is a gift for us all—and the fact that Brasch can accomplish bringing us along on his difficult quest with such a welcomingly twisted sense of humor is revelatory.
His maternal grandmother Irene (Carolyn Mignini) is the worst off, relegated to a care facility and, although no longer really capable of holding a conversation or even acknowledging Josh’s presence, she can sing a few verses of unseasonal Crissmiss carols like a retired member of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir.
Her husband Hank (Geoffrey Wade), although still With Us, seems totally unaware of his descendant’s all-too public struggles when he runs into him at a bookstore while looking for a copy of The Fountainhead to give to his gastroenterologist, while his paternal granddad Shrimpy (Lee Wilkof) is not only enlightened but more than willing to make some knee-slapping jokes about Josh’s drinking or his sexuality.
Still, Josh’s strongest bond is with Shrimpy’s ex Beverly (Liz Larsen), a feisty no-nonsense electrical engineer who helps her grandson more than any of the others—even though she professes outright that she would prefer not to have to be so close and nurturing with him.
Director Shelley Butler is the quintessential partner for the unstoppable imagination and quirky style of Brasch, collaborating with him to implement his balls-out narrative devises, including moments when light changes signal that Josh has left the scene and is instead talking directly to us—prompting after one such episode for Beverly to ask him, “Where do you go when you do that?”
In fact, both pairs of grandparents stay seated upstage through most of the action, ready to step into the story at a moment’s notice and willing to comment on what’s happening even if they’re not really there. It’s a fascinating and wildly inventive example of the lack of limits inherent in creating theatrical magic.
Along the way, as Josh desperately attempts to heal, Brasch finds moments to mine humor in unexpected ways, sending up everything from vegan anarchist co-ops to senior aerobics (with Hinkle doubling as an ‘80s-esque Jane Fonda-like exercise guru who introduces herself as “I’m Jeanette and I’m a visionary”), and on to Shrimpy’s admission that he’s 85% straight but likes to look at images of dicks on his computer.
To say Butler’s cast is golden is a huge understatement. Horowitz is absolutely stunning as Josh, one of those roles that could make any actor sleep 18 hours a day between performances to keep from crashing.
All four actors playing his goofy grandparents are superlative, especially Wilkof’s charmingly off-kilter Shrimpy (no one’s called him Milton since grade school), who refers to his recently diagnosed condition as “diet Alzheimer’s,” and Larsen, who gives a standout tour-de-force performance as the tough but loving Beverly.
Hinkle is almost unrecognizable as she zips between supporting characters, as is Adrian Gonzalez playing a series of characters, including a beach cop, an abrasive psychologist author, and especially as Josh’s patient manager at a local bookstore who's hiding some heady secrets of his own.
This troupe of veteran performers are the heart of The Reservoir, which would never work as well without such talent and a palpable willingness to believe in Brasch’s outrageous over-the-top characters.
Still, it’s all about the discovery of a brilliant new dramatist whose star, with this exceptional debut, has clearly been launched into the stratosphere and I suspect will soon be recognized as one of the brightest in the galaxy.
As it was with early Durang or Charles Mee, some people might be a tad put off by Jake Brasch’s idiosyncrasies, his intrepid honestly, and his willingness to bare his soul, not to mention his delightfully skewed and inappropriate playfulness dealing with some usually dead serious subjects.
Personally, as a longtime primary caregiver to a partner slowly disappearing into dementia and Alzheimer’s, I was more than ready for a good swift kick in my poor-me pants provided by his bold and dark sense of humor.
“How many Alzheimer’s patients does it take to screw in a lightbulb?,” Shrimpy asks.
“To get to the other side.”