Danny & the Deep Blue Sea | Theater | Salt Lake City Weekly

Danny & the Deep Blue Sea 

Emotion in Motion: Humor, anger and heartbreak fuel three new theater productions.

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Like the world it portrays, the opening minutes of John Patrick Shanley’s Danny & the Deep Blue Sea aren’t particularly inviting. In a Bronx dive bar, the music is cranked at a volume that forces the only two patrons—Danny (Jesse Peery), a bruised, high-strung loner, and Roberta (Amber Hansen), a troubled single mother—to scream at each other. Even once the music quiets, Danny and Roberta still spend a lot of time screaming.

But while it takes time to acclimate to this tale of people defined by violence and self-loathing, the payoff is worth it. After a tentative connection, Danny and Roberta spend a night and morning trying to figure out what they can be to one another. Gradually, the play becomes a heartbreaking portrait of what happens to people convinced they don’t deserve to be happy.

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The play requires two tightrope-walking performances, and that’s what director Terence Goodman finds in his young leads. Peery spends much of the first act twitching and darting like an animal that can barely be contained by its own skin, yet he grounds that constant motion in a longing for connection. Hansen’s Roberta proves to be equally complex, and she finds a completely convincing way to convey an anger and despair perhaps more profound than Danny’s. Together, they’re riveting to watch.

That doesn’t mean Danny is easy to watch. The story is often brutally frank, and the high pitch of the emotions in such an intimate setting creates a near-constant tension. But for a mesmerizing 70 minutes, two terrific performances take us to a tragic, painfully real world.

DANNY & THE DEEP BLUE SEA
Egyptian Theatre Company Black Box
333 Main, Park City
435-649-9371
Through Nov. 14
$10
ParkCityShows.com

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Scott Renshaw

Scott Renshaw

Bio:
Scott Renshaw has been a City Weekly staff member since 1999, including assuming the role of primary film critic in 2001 and Arts & Entertainment Editor in 2003. Scott has covered the Sundance Film Festival for 25 years, and provided coverage of local arts including theater, pop-culture conventions, comedy, literature,... more

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