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Theater: In Tandem's 'Beast on the Moon' captures young couple's str

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  • Theater: In Tandem's 'Beast on the Moon' captures young couple's str

    Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, WI
    March 3 2013


    In Tandem's 'Beast on the Moon' capture's young couple's struggles to
    move on from painful past

    By Mike Fischer, Special to the Journal Sentinel

    In the first scene of Richard Kalinoski's "Beast on the Moon" - now on
    stage in a beautiful and nuanced production at In Tandem's Tenth
    Street Theatre - 19-year-old Aram Tomasian learns that his newly
    arrived child bride is not the girl he'd been promised.

    "I ordered the girl in this picture and they sent me someone else,"
    Aram pouts. Yes, 15-year-old Seta replies, but "I am the same girl who
    wrote you." Eager to please but also slightly impish, Seta can't
    resist adding that she is also prettier than the pictured girl.

    That exchange captures the difference between these two young Armenian
    immigrants, played by Michael Cotey and Grace DeWolff.

    Orphaned survivors of the Armenian genocide who have landed in
    Milwaukee, Aram and Seta have a chance for a fresh start in their new
    country.

    But Aram can't move past frozen images of the past - including a
    haunting photograph of his murdered family. Seta is haunted as well.
    But she also is just glad to be alive - and well aware that life
    requires periodic adjustments to our pictured expectations.

    Under Mary MacDonald Kerr's direction, Cotey and DeWolff sketch this
    couple's often painful efforts to bridge that divide through the
    12-year span - from 1921 to 1933 - during which "Beast" unfolds.

    Impeccably dressed in a dark suit, Cotey's Aram exhibits a matching
    formality in everything he does, from his stiff posture and gestures
    to the accompanying rituals - including selective Bible readings on
    wifely obedience - through which he tries to honor the memory of a
    dead father.

    Cotey's young and puckish face underscores the disconnect between the
    father Aram wants to embody and the lost boy he often still is. In his
    self-conscious attempts to act like a man, he winds up stunting his
    development; as time moves forward, he seems to regress.

    As Aram shrinks, an initially cowed Seta begins to grow, and watching
    DeWolff trace that arc leaves me certain we'll see much more of this
    young and very talented actor, from whom Kerr has coaxed an
    extraordinary performance.

    When we first meet Seta, she is clearly still a girl, wearing her
    quicksilver emotions - from joy and irrepressible laughter to terror -
    on her homespun sleeves.

    Once DeWolff's Seta morphs into a graceful and poised woman -
    stylishly dressed from cloche hat to heeled shoes by costume designer
    Eleanor Cotey - her formerly bright eyes and mischievous smile fade,
    as she tries to conform to her husband's regimented expectations.

    That's a no-go for many reasons, but chief among them is that Seta has
    a mind of her own. When she eventually gives Aram his comeuppance,
    DeWolff's Seta has long prepared the way, having already conveyed a
    fierce inner strength through her sharp and intelligent face.

    Playing both a young orphan boy whom Seta once protected and the old
    man that boy later became, Robert Spencer persuasively reinforces the
    inevitability of change - and how positive that experience can be,
    when bolstered by love of the sort Seta wants to give and Aram
    desperately needs.

    ***
    IF YOU GO
    "Beast on the Moon" continues through March 24 at the Tenth Street
    Theatre, 628 N. 10th St. For tickets, call (414) 271-1371 or go to
    www.intandemtheatre.org.



    http://www.jsonline.com/entertainment/arts/in-tandems-beast-on-the-moon-shines-brightly-vr8udct-194518881.html

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