Chicago Theatre Review
Raccoons and Meditation bring enlightenment in BUDDHA’S BIRTHDAY

BUDDHA’S BIRTHDAY, by award winning playwright Amy Crider, began as a ten-minute play written for a Scene Shop Showcase at Chicago Dramatists in 2014. Crider wrote and expanded her original idea, and Lucid Theater Company debuted it August 2, directed by Iris Sowlat.
Pamela (a nervous and likeable Kristie Berger) is a history professor up for tenure. She’s also planning her mother’s 80th birthday and trying to finish her first book. She’s got a racoon problem in her yard, a leaky roof, and the students at her university are rebelling against the traditional history curriculum. Her husband, Lawrence (a charming Christopher Hainsworth as your favorite college “prof”) a philosophy professor, is doing his best to support her through it all. She does yoga and is a practicing Buddhist, but it’s not helping. Pamela is an anxious mess. It’s affecting every part of her life, and despite her adoring husband and successful career, she is deeply insecure.
As the first act unfolds, Pamela and Lawrence appear to have a loving and solid relationship, though much of their focus is centered on her difficulties getting through any event.
Once Pamela’s mother, Roberta (the delightful Kathleen Ruhl) arrives, the source of Pamela’s raging insecurity is clearer. Ruhl’s Roberta has never held a punch in her life. She has a sharp tongue and a critical eye. She’s also very proud of her other daughter, Ellen, a powerhouse attorney. Crider delivers here with tight, funny, dialogue that is all too familiar to anyone with someone important in their life who only ever seems to notice your flaws. Next is Jennifer (a sweet and sunny Ada Grey), Pamela’s niece, who has flown in for the party after months spent backpacking across the world. The last piece of this family chaos-puzzle is a wily raccoon, who jumps in and out of scenes and creates general havoc, perhaps as a symbol of our inability to truly control anything in this life.

As Pamela strives towards enlightenment, she struggles to connect with each of her family members and her partner, but it’s the relationships between the women that are most interesting. Crider has a keen eye for the complexity inherent in long term and familial relationships. The best part of the show is watching three generations of a family navigate the expectations of each other versus their own personal fulfillment. Ruhl’s Roberta is the definition of a “spitfire” old lady, she’s hilarious, and happily, not my mom. Grey’s Jennifer has a sunny smile and buoyant presence that radiate peace and joy. Her desire to go her own way and easy embrace of self-love highlights her aunt Pamela’s increasingly desperate mind-set, which Berger portrays with a fidgeting, hand wringing intensity. Pamela has spent her whole life desperate for praise and attention from her mother, and it has shaped how much space she allows herself to take up. Pamela’s also spent so much time obsessed with pleasing her mom that she ignores a key conversation with her husband, leading to disastrous results. Luckily, her years of Buddhist practice have left her open to advice from an unexpected source and she finally begins to realize that some of her mother’s narratives that she has accepted without question are utterly wrong.
The text drives towards a confrontation between Pamela and her mother. Her family roots for her, the audience roots for her, and yet, the final act of the play takes an unexpected turn, missing an opportunity. Rather than end with a potentially cathartic confrontation between generations of women, Crider went with a more conventional feminist trope of a woman who cuts herself loose in the span of a moment. Based on the two hours we spent with her, she cut the wrong string, but don’t worry, the raccoon is fine.
Somewhat Recommended
Reviewed by Alina C. Hevia
BUDDHA’S BIRTHDAY runs August 2-17th on Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays at 7:30, and Sunday at 3:00 pm, present by Lucid Theater Co. at The Edge Theatre, 5451 N. Broadway.
Tickets: $38 plus applicable fees, on sale at www.lucidtheater.com
Please visit www.lucidtheater.com for more information.
Additional information about this and other area productions can be found by visiting www.theatreinchicago.com.
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