The Spoils
The New Group
The Pershing Square Signature Center
May 31, 2015
Photo courtesy of The New Group |
In
the opening scene, Kalyan (Kunal Nayyar) asks his girlfriend, Reshma (Annapurna
Sriram) if she thinks it is better to tell someone a truth
that will hurt their feelings and possibly destroy what they have that is going
smoothly in their life, or leave well enough alone by withholding information. As a playwright, Jesse Eisenberg explores
this concept when the main character, Ben, who he portrays, does just that to
the people to whom he is closely connected.
The term “closely connected” refers to Ben’s roommate Kalyan, his
girlfriend Reshma, Ben’s grade school crush Sarah (Erin Darke), and her fiancĂ©
Ted (Michael Zegen). Since Ben has managed to alienate himself from
all social, professional, and creative contacts (he considers himself a
filmmaker), these four characters are not necessarily defined
by this term within his isolated existence. It gets
ugly and uncomfortable when Ben starts revealing some “truths” he has kept to himself. What exactly is the truth and what purpose
does it serve anyway?
Jesse Eisenberg and Kunal Nayyar in The Spoils Photo courtesy of The New Group |
Scott
Elliot’s directing is superb. The two
and a half hour play is tight and controlled.
Each of the five cast members is excellent. They create authentic and realistic
relationships based on genuine emotion, whether it’s compassion, generosity,
jealousy, love, lust, loathing, or any strange and complex combination. The depths of the characters are revealed
throughout the play, but not fully exposed until the last moments. Thank you Jesse Eisenberg for this prolific,
unpredictable, and riveting journey of a play.
Michael Zegen, Jesse Eisenberg and Erin Darke in The Spoils Phots courtesy of The New Group |
On a personal
note: In the second act, Kalyan tells Ben about a
job interview he went on which was unpleasant and humiliating. His possible future employer berated his comments
so that he felt like everything he said was the wrong answer. Kalyan’s qualifications, education, and
intelligence are clearly built up throughout the play. The integrity of his interviewer is clearly
questionable in the way he tells the story.
I had a similar experience last week.
Kalyan only had Ben to turn to, who filled up his head with “truths” that
magnified the point of view of his interviewer.
Ben then continues to tear down Kalyan and illustrates how he created
the alienated situation he thrives on.
I, on the other hand, was lucky enough to immediately call my friend
Julia who gave me a more positive perspective.
A few questions come to mind:
Which “truth” is real? Is it the
one that serves you and keeps you moving forward with verve and
self-confidence? Or, is it the one that
the person in power holds over you? This
brings up the basis of Ben and Kalyan’s relationship. Ben kicks Kalyan when he is down in order to
lift himself up. Which “truth” is best
for Ben and Kalyan to face? Will “truths” that Kalyan holds back from Ben
affect him as deeply as the ones Ben reveals to Kalyan? Does the question Kalyan asks in the opening
of the play have a different answer based on the circumstances?
Go
see The New Group’s production of Jesse Eisenberg’s The Spoils at The Pershing Square Signature Center. It runs through June 28. The truth is… you’re gonna love it!
Domenick Danza
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