Meyers’ protagonists are a
cynical lawyer named Taylor (Jake Suffian) and his idealistic physicist
climbing partner Harold (Sean Galuszka). Harold is the one with the broken
leg.
While Taylor obsessively
inventories what equipment they haven’t lost along the way, Harold keeps
falling over into a sleep that threatens to become fatal. As Taylor tries
to keep his friend upright and awake, he discovers that he has lost one of
their climbing ropes, a vital necessity if they are going to try to get
down off the mountain. And so there is nothing for it but to climb back up
to the spot from which they had fallen, to retrieve the second rope.
As Taylor inches his way up the
elaborate scaffolding that set designer Laura Fine Hawkes has used to
simulate the mountain, he is accompanied by Harold’s rambling ruminations
about his wife and son, about the mysteries of life, and about his search
for God.
Having once given up on God,
Harold had his faith restored when, as a physicist, he was involved in the
discovery of the quark---an elementary particle thought to be the
fundamental constituent of matter. “We found God’s house,” he acknowledges
ruefully, “and we called it ‘quark’.”
Harold, in intense pain, becomes
a bit hallucinatory occasionally, but he is still not as intense as
Taylor, who is driven to the brink of madness with the agonizing
responsibility of trying to save both their lives. His anguished shouting
rattles the mountainside and exhausts both himself and the audience. It is
an acting tour de force and a credit to director Damen Scranton, who has
called this play “a director’s nightmare.” It is also a credit to Tony
Yeary, the climbing consultant who taught the actors high altitude
climbing techniques and the use of the mountaineering equipment.
“K2” is not an easy play, either
for the actors or the audience, but it is a beautifully written, highly
intelligent, and moving piece of work. Both actors do a strong, convincing
job, and their suffering, as well as the overwhelming roar of the
ferocious winds on the mountain leaves the viewer surprised, as he exits
the theater, that he doesn’t, in fact, have frostbite.
“K2” will continue at the
Underground Theatre, 1314 North Wilton Place, in Hollywood, Thursdays
through Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 7 through November 14th. Call
(800) 838-3006 for tickets.
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