No Tea has wisely kept an element of spontaneity by performing a different selection of shows in a different order each night. While this leaves me unable to comment on the entirety of the experience, I will say I was not disappointed by any of the shows I saw. All of the actors have incredible chemistry, in particularly Sabrina Farhi and Jeff Sproul in David Ives’ Sure Thing, Sproul and Brooke Eddey in Garth Wingfield's Please Have a Seat and Someone Will Be with You Shortly (which was the most satisfying one-act I saw all night), and Farhi and Richard Lovejoy in the honeymoon-gone-awry saga of Dorothy Parker’s Here We Are. All in all, this is a company that’s on a roll right now, and has nowhere to go but up if the economy allows it.
My one complaint was that Lindsey Moore’s direction often let the occasional beat linger too long, which threw off some scenes’ timing. But that’s no reason to miss one of the best displays of romantic malaise you’re likely to see on the New York stage this season. Plucking Failures Like Ripe Fruit is an absolute joy, and it’s almost enough to make you overlook whatever problems plague you in what is supposedly the most wonderful time of the year.
Plucking Failures Like Ripe Fruit: A NIght of One-Act Romantic Tragedies. Directed by Lindsey Moore; lighting design by Timothy Mather; sound design by Lisa Nussbaum; production photos by by D. Robert Wolcheck.
Starring Alicia Barnatchez, Brooke Eddey, Sabrina Farhi, Richard Lovejoy, Jeremy Mather, and Jeff Sproul, with D. Robert Wolcheck.
Plucking Failures Like Ripe Fruit is produced by No Tea Productions and Horse Trade Theater Group. The show will run at UNDER St. Marks (94 St. Marks Place) until December 6. Tickets can be purchased at www.horseTRADE.info







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