
Lady Misrule,ย โ โ ยฝ,ย Through Dec. 15,ย Walltown Childrenโs Theatre, Durham,ย tinyenginetheatre.com
My first encounter with โChristmas noirโ was as a college radio DJ, when Donald Fagan intoned the stark lyrics of Steely Danโs โCharlie Freakโ over telltale sleigh bells and a tight studio band. Lady Misrule, Tiny Engine Theatreโs dark December offering at Walltown Childrenโs Theatre, also deals with death, dodgy motivations, and unwise bargains leveraged at someone elseโs ultimately fatal expense.
We find ourselves on the mean streets of an unexpected urban dystopia: the North Pole, home of Santa Claus (a blunt Kurt Benrud), Tanya, whoโs more of an enigmatic placeholder than Clausโs wife (Erica Heilmann), and a cadre of human and elven โhelpersโ whose motivationsโand propensities for unpredictable, aggressive, antisocial behaviorโremain obscure.ย ย
But director and playwright Paul Sappโs challenging dramatic jigsaw puzzle attempts to transcend noirโs pulp-fiction pedigree when the murder that opens the workโthe death of Nora Wurth, a young, idealistic, and seemingly universally adored helpmeet (a crisp Jessica Fleming)โonly leads into broader mysteries. When her father, Stephen (David Berberian), has to be the unwilling gumshoe who investigates her death, the truths he stumbles upon raise questions deeper than those associated with the genreโs dime-store roots.
From a production standpoint, though, Lady Misrule repeatedly confirms the misgivings that tend to arise whenever playwrights direct their own works. The two jobs and their corresponding skill sets are far from identical. Playwrights have to clearly see the world theyโre making; directors have to make sure we clearly see it. That doesnโt always happen in this production.
Mysteries are tricky. If too much is disclosed too soon, a big reveal evaporates into nothingness. But here, the lack of disclosure leaves too many plot points and characterizations unarticulated. Though thrillers thrive on functional ambiguity, the dysfunctional kind disadvantages Lady Misruleโthe relationships, causalities, and tantalizing altered social structures they hinge upon remain too smudged past the final line. Noelle Barnard Azareloโs lithe and lethal Kiki is an elf whose allegiances and motivations we never understand. Page Purgarโs gruff head of security, the hapless Tanya, and even Nora stay more shadowed than is useful.
Sappโs script is promising, but it clearly needed another draft before production. Ending too many scenes with a last-line cliffhanger becomes a recognizable crutch, and the stop-and-stop pacing of too many brief scenes sabotages momentum, which is further dulled by the monotonous musical sound cues used in both acts.
Thatโs too bad, as this work engages worthwhile questions. When Santaโs estranged daughter, Connie (Laurel Ullman), seeks to shake up our core holiday tradition, Lady Misrule asks whatโs lost when philanthropy crosses into coercion. Has capitalism fundamentally corrupted Christmas? What would a useful reset look like? And what happens when dehumanizing rhetoric is coded into the โothersโ in speculative fiction: elves, imps, and the like, who are and are not us? Unfortunately, the answers arenโt always fully fleshed out in this Yuletide inquest.


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