Persephone Palmer
Steps Out
Theater for the New City
June 20, 2025
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Photo courtesy of Persephone Palmer Steps Out |
Persephone Plamer Steps Out is a dark and mysterious
depiction of a family’s dynamic, dominated by their cat, who creates the
connections that both keep the family together and push them apart. Playwright Caitlyn Waltermire skillfully
embeds the myth of Persephone in the action of the play, creating a magical atmosphere
that is full of strange surprises. Director
Natalie Thomas grounds the magical elements in realistic characters, guiding each
actor in truthful portrayals of the relationships that drive the story.
Connie Palmer (played by
Zuhairah) spends most of her time at home alone with her cat, Persephone Palmer,
aka Persie (played by Sophie Kelly-Hedrick).
When Connie’s husband, Herm (played by Guy Ventoliere) returns from
work, they play with the cat, admiring her intelligence, then eat dinner
together. When their son, Joe (played by
Alec Febbraro) comes home with his girlfriend, Stef (played by Jessalyn
Charles), Persie scratches her, which angers Joe. He disciplines her by spraying her with a
water bottle. Connie and Herm are
permissive with Joe’s bringing Stef over, but when Joe introduces them to Paul
(played by Diogo de Oliveira), they sense danger. Percie, on the other hand, is very attracted
to Paul, and openly shows her affection.
Paul lets himself into the apartment at night and connects with Percie
on another level. Percie begins to speak
directly to him. When Connie’s brother, Richard (played by Phil Oetiker) and his much younger wife, Lisa (played by
Elizabeth Sherman) visit, Lisa feels a strange bond with Percie. She unexpectedly returns a few nights later
with Richard, after having too much to drink.
She tells about how she and Richard first met fifteen years earlier. Strangely, Percie is fifteen years old. In the final scene, Percie stands and puts on
Connie’s coat. She opens the door to
leave the apartment. Connie tries to
stop her and admits she will not be able to survive without her.
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Guy Ventoliere, Sophie Kelly-Hedrick, & Zuhairah Photo courtey of Persephone Palmer Steps Out |
The cast is fully
committed to their characters throughout the story, keeping the audience enthralled through the dark and magical unfolding of events. In the world of this play, anything is
possible. The intelligence and
personification of the cat, Percie, and her connection to the extended family are
fully believable. Their bonds are
visceral, mythical, and hypnotically engaging.
Sophie Kelly-Hedrick is
mesmerizing as Persephone (Percie). She is
beguiling and bewitching. The emergence
of her human characteristics is gradual and excruciating. She pushes the vocal expression from her
cat-like physicality. When her body
slowly grows to a full standing position by the time she leaves the apartment,
there is more ease in her physicality, as if she has achieved her full reality.
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Sophie Kelly-Hedrick & Diogo de Oliveira Photo courtesy of Persephone Palmer Steps Out |
Zuhairah and Guy
Ventoliere create a truthful husband/wife relationship as Connie and Herm. Connie suffers from anxiety, feeling trapped
in the apartment, and Herm offers his support with humor and affection. Their relationship is touching and genuine in
this dark and mysterious world. Alec
Febbraro, Diogo de Oliveira, and Jessalyn Charles portray rebellious teens as
Joe, Paul, and Stef. Their angst is
palpable. Their urges are strong. Their bond is genuine. Elizabeth Sherman and Phil Oetiker deliver
strong performances as Lisa and Richard.
You can tell right away that something is off in their
relationship. When the truth is revealed,
it is disturbing and fathomable.
Persephone Palmer Steps Out is playing at Theater for the New City until July 6. It is a mystifying, mind-bending adventure.
Domenick Danza