A Play About Birds, (Also Faith, Hope, Loss And Love)

Reading Adam Bock’s “Five Flightsâ€� you might miss the wonder of it.  

   That’s because no one speaks complete sentences in this play. They get rattled, leave out words, stop in mid thought, forget what they are getting at, or fear what they are getting at. And quit, or leave, or bring up another matter.

   Sometimes the action halts for an address to let the audience know what’s happening. What’s really happening.

    And, oh yes. One more thing. “Five Flightsâ€� is about a bird religion.

   As screenwriter Joan Ackermann, artistic director of Mixed Company, tells us in her introduction, “It’s an odd little play.â€�

   But Bock is a fearless and imaginative storyteller; and his “Five Flightsâ€� on a stage, and in the hands of director Emma Dweck and her fine actors, makes clear how magical and how transcending theater can be.

   And how wacky.

   Bock’s world opens in an aviary, a house for birds. It was built by a man grieving the death of his wife, thinking the little brown wren who landed on his hand during her funeral was she. Her soul, anyway.

   The bird dies (to the confusion of some) in time, and so does he, and the play begins with two of his offspring, Ed and Adele, and the white-sneakered biologist Jane (Stephanie Hedges), wife of the third never-seen child Bobby, squabbling over what to do with the aviary, its wire surround tufted with sad feathers, the whole in  parlous condition. Inclinations run from profitable development of the land to letting it all crumble in peace.  

   Into the mix enters the wild and disorderly Olivia (Diane Prusha), a friend of Adele. Olivia wants the aviary for a church, “The Church of the Fifth Day,â€� which was the day God created birds, that symbol of heaven and good. It is through birds Olivia hears the voice of God in a freakish and frightening assault of beating wings and tempest winds at the aviary.

    So, she gets to work proselytizing with blind vigor. Helped by Adele (Jennifer Young), and Ed, her brother, (the estimable Hanuman Goleman) and his would-be lover Tom (Enrico Spada) the church takes root, or wing, really. Briefly.

   It attracts the interest of Tom’s hockey teammate Andre (Ryan Marchione), a dear character disposed to marshmallow crisps and love in varied forms. And, as with any fine play, more than one strain proceeds, and this is the story of Tom pursuing Ed, a man of generosity and insight, except where love is concerned. Clearly, Tom and Ed are meant for each other.

   It seems, though, that  Ed would risk life alone rather than risk love and loss.

   But maybe not.

   So, as the story works itself out, some people here pursue love; some fear love; and some may simply want to be singular. Alone. Olivia, the prophet and teacher and visionary, who preaches love like mad from her bird church, rejects it in its keenest, most human form.

   And in the end, Adele, alone in the world, stands in the dark as feathers fall on her, like a benediction.

   This play is a marvel, a joy, and a wonder.

   “Five Flightsâ€� by Adam Bock runs at Mixed Company, 37 Rosseter St., Great Barrington, MA, Thursdays through Saturdays, to Oct. 24.

   For reservations, call  413-528-2320. Tickets for $15 are available at Crystal Essence on Railroad Street.  

    

     

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