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Through Sunday, Feb. 10
PlayMakers Repertory Company, Chapel Hill
From the first moments of Jump, we know weโre in a surreal world. More than a trace of Robert Wilsonโs spare manipulations of time, cause, and effect are visible in the stage imagery director Whitney Whiteโs design team achieves at the start of this PlayMakers Repertory Company world premiere.
Sinan Zafarโs Eno-esque ambient soundscape juxtaposes long, weightless chords with crisp, disconnected urban sounds, as actor April Mae Davis walks onto set designer Alexis Distlerโs impressive section of a paint-peeling big-city bridge. Amith Chandrashakerโs 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 bridgeโs 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 donโt need most of playwright Charly Evon Simpsonโs uncertain reminders throughout Jumpโs ninety minutesโin too many non-sequitur light cues, rewound dialogue, and references to sudden head pain and disorientationโthat weโre viewing events through one characterโs 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 Fayโs tense conversations with her dad, carefully sculpted by actor Trevor Johnson as a grieving, angry, self-medicating man whoโs just as rocked by the familyโs subtractions.
As a long day of housecleaning extends well after dark, Simpson sets tentative family rapprochements against the equally tentative beginnings of Fayโs 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 heโs been contemplating and resisting suicide for reasons that challenge his ability to put them into words. By playโs end, we learn heโs not the only one to have consideredโor acted onโthat impulse.
Like a strange cross between Marie Kondo and Jack Kevorkian, Simpsonโs characters inventory the things theyโre tempted to keepโincluding childhood mementos, family structures, relationship dynamics, and their livesโin a pensive drama with a candid concession: All that we value is contingent and in need of regular reexamination.


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