arts Feathered Friends
GCP’s ‘Birds of a Feather’ Hatches Laughs, Ponders Love in All Forms Think back to the last time you saw a play where the main characters were talking birds. Were you there as a result of familial obligations? Was it at an elementary school? Did it involve someone’s mom hot-gluing a bag of feathers to an old Hanes T-shirt? Regardless of your feelings on theater by and/or for children, take note: Gulfport Community Players’ “Birds of a Feather” is no kids show. There are life lessons aplenty for humans big and small, but if you bring the wee ones be prepared for a lively discussion on the ride home. The script by Marc Acito is inspired by the same real-life events featured in the 2005 children’s book “And Tango Makes Three” by Peter Parnell and Justin Richardson. Roy and Silo, two chinstrap penguins in New York’s Central Park Zoo, bonded, hatched an abandoned egg from another penguin, and raised the chick as their own. While the play similarly centers on a pair of penguins embarking on parenthood together, it ventures much further into grown-up talk as it ruminates not only on the definition of family, but also on the themes of nature vs. nurture, physical and emotional inti-
GULFPORT COMMUNITY PLAYERS
By Jeff Donnelly
The cast of Gulfport Community Players’ “Birds of a Feather,” from left: Sam DePriest, Velda Gauthier, Taylor X. Taylor, Jennifer Casler, Nic Roland, Daniel Harris and Donna DeLonay.
macy, and, ultimately, love itself. That’s a lot of ground to cover, and the playwright sometimes struggles to avoid heavy-handed monologuing. But Director Patrick Brafford, who also designed the smartly efficient set, coaxes genuinely engaging, funny, and oftentimes touching performances from his cast to balance out the weight of the show’s messaging.
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As the two penguins at the center of the story, Daniel Harris and Nic Roland strike up compelling chemistry, no small feat considering unexpected co-parenting isn’t the only complication in their relationship: Roland’s Silo is reluctant to fully own his identity as one half of a sincerely loving pair, in contrast with Harris’ exuberantly all-in Roy. “Birds” is a comedy about gay penguins, and the yuks are solid and flow steadily: Roland and Harris could probably sit back and coast on a clever premise, fanciful costumes and a lot of well-crafted jokes. But the production is elevated by their willingness to dig into the, well, humanity of these penguins. And while Harris and Roland anchor the show as the penguins everyone was talking about, they aren’t the only notable birds in the ensemble. High above Silo and Roy in Central Park, perched on the ledge of a swank New York apartment building, red-tailed hawks Pale Male and Lola have built a nest and a life together and they’re generating Kardashian-like buzz on the streets below. Taylor X. Taylor brings
theGabber.com | June 17, 2021 - June 23, 2021