OK, Don't Sing, But Be There

   Remember Peggy Lee singing “Fever?â€

   Deadpan.

   Cool.

   And hot.   

   Then how about “Fever†as a grandmother’s lullaby?

   “Never know how much I love you,†Vera (Adriane Lenox) croons, cradling baby Eli, closing the first act of Tracy Thorne’s “We Are Here.â€

   “Never know how much I care,†complete with hot little drum licks.      

   Time runs both ways in this play. We meet Eli the newborn long after we meet Eli the adolescent (Michael Cummings) dancing on a piano and pushing hip-hop on his mother, Billie (de’Adre Aziza), and his grandfather, Everett (Larry Pine), old jazz fans, both. The effect of this time playing is bright. Surfacey. Wanting. We get a lot of talking, a lot of smart lines, a lot of fine acting, some fancy staging and a great deal of feeling around for a place to take hold. But this play seems like a two-act piece pulled out of one, and it does not come alive until halfway through with Eli’s grandmother crooning “Fever.†That’s where the play gels. Where it grabs us. It’s where Thorne focuses on what this is about: love, unbearable loss, and living with it.

   We know Eli the adolescent is dead.

   Now we care.

   The lullaby told us how loved he was.

   Thorne uses music to make her big moments soar and the family actually (and believably) schedules music nights, with Everett playing on the huge, beat-up grand piano, Vera singing and their two daughters, the gorgeous Billie and the volatile and obstreperous Shawn (Uzo Aduba), joining in. Billie insists that her new husband, Hal (Adam Rothenberg), join her parents and sister around the piano, singing the great standards.    

   “I love your parents,†Hal says. “I just don’t need to love them so often.â€

   “You don’t have to sing,†she tells Hal. “But you have to come.â€

   Like life, Thorne is saying.

   So the play gives us some well-worn family frictions. And throws in something else: Both men in this play, Everett and Hal, are white. The three women are black. Why this matters is not clear. And maybe that’s the point.

   Because there’s Eli’s death. And grief is the greatest leveler of them all, an equal opportunity destroyer. The family is coming apart.

   Except there is still the music, and Cole Porter’s “I Concentrate on You,†and a staggeringly powerful close.

   “We are Here,†directed by Sheryl Kaller, runs at Vassar’s Powerhouse Theater through July 11. For tickets, call 845-437-5907 or go to PHTBoxoffice@vassar.edu.

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