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![]() Click for stage events Tip of the Week The Glory of Living
Entering Profiles Theatre's small Uptown space, the first thing you
encounter is a security guard, who greets you politely and without
explanation. This off-putting detail hints at the dislocations to come
in Rebecca Gilman's potent crime-spree drama. By the end of the first
fifteen minutes of the play, you've seen the car thief Clint (Darrell
W. Cox) seduce fifteen-year-old Lisa (Kelly O'Sullivan) over the moans
of Lisa's truck-stop hooker mother entertaining a john offstage, and
seen Clint pull a handcuffed girl (Lynda Newton) from under a motel-room
bed as casually as retrieving a magazine. Gilman's first act is a
relentless and expert assault, leaving you dreading as much what you
might be about to see as reacting to what you're already seeing. Cox
plays the demonic Clint with furied menace and brutal power. O'Sullivan
conveys simultaneously the ferocious callousness and wounded innocence
of Lisa. Their scenes together mix violence with a dreadful stillness.
Gilman's second act takes an unfortunate detour into "CSI"-land, with
seemingly interminable interrogations confirming what we already knew.
But O'Sullivan and Joe Jahraus as Lisa's attorney Carl invest the
final moments of the play with tragic poetry. "The Glory of Living" plays at Profiles Theatre, 4147 North
Broadway, (773)549-1815, through November 27.
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