Jump

โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…

Through Sunday, Feb. 10

PlayMakers Repertory Company, Chapel Hill

From the first moments of Jump, we know weโ€™re in a surreal world. More than a trace of Robert Wilsonโ€™s spare manipulations of time, cause, and effect are visible in the stage imagery director Whitney Whiteโ€™s design team achieves at the start of this PlayMakers Repertory Company world premiere.

Sinan Zafarโ€™s Eno-esque ambient soundscape juxtaposes long, weightless chords with crisp, disconnected urban sounds, as actor April Mae Davis walks onto set designer Alexis Distlerโ€™s impressive section of a paint-peeling big-city bridge. Amith Chandrashakerโ€™s lights set the time at twilight as Davis slowly brings a vape pen to her mouth and inhales. When the smoke ghosts from her pursed lips, it holds an eerie semi-corporeal form for a moment before dissipating. After Davis nervelessly drops the pen over the bridgeโ€™s railing, she repeats the gesture, pulling out a series of vaporizers, smoking, and then dropping them until the image is thoroughly burned in.ย 

With an opening that chimerical, we probably donโ€™t need most of playwright Charly Evon Simpsonโ€™s uncertain reminders throughout Jumpโ€™s ninety minutesโ€”in too many non-sequitur light cues, rewound dialogue, and references to sudden head pain and disorientationโ€”that weโ€™re viewing events through one characterโ€™s shifting states of consciousness.

That would be Fay, a twenty-something office assistant who is still shaken a year after the death of her mother. Fay hides her unease behind a pugilistic front with her older sister, Judy (Shanelle Nicole Leonard), a necessary prerequisite for cleaning out their childhood home before its sale. A similar sense of armed truce permeates Fayโ€™s tense conversations with her dad, carefully sculpted by actor Trevor Johnson as a grieving, angry, self-medicating man whoโ€™s just as rocked by the familyโ€™s subtractions.

As a long day of housecleaning extends well after dark, Simpson sets tentative family rapprochements against the equally tentative beginnings of Fayโ€™s relationship with Hopkins (Adam Poole), an edgy grad student she meets during her walks along the local bridge. Mortality and alienation tinge that relationship as well; Hopkins admits heโ€™s been contemplating and resisting suicide for reasons that challenge his ability to put them into words. By playโ€™s end, we learn heโ€™s not the only one to have consideredโ€”or acted onโ€”that impulse.

Like a strange cross between Marie Kondo and Jack Kevorkian, Simpsonโ€™s characters inventory the things theyโ€™re tempted to keepโ€”including childhood mementos, family structures, relationship dynamics, and their livesโ€”in a pensive drama with a candid concession: All that we value is contingent and in need of regular reexamination.

Bio: Byron Woods is the INDY's theater and dance critic.Email: [email protected]: http://twitter.com/byronwoods