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The separate scenes with those individuals have the snap and heft of truth, as Eric tries to grapple with — and extricate himself from — his past and his faith.
But the playwright sadly loses his direction once Eric lands in la-la land to pursue his movie deal. First, he winds up in his luxurious hotel room with a young literary groupie named Alison, played by a game Jane Conway. Even though it's not hard to accept a middle-aged man hooking up with a young chick in the abstract, it's not made clear why Eric makes this particular decision.
In the next scene, Eric meets with Melanie, a film producer, and Tyler, the mimbo actor who will be involved in turning his book into a movie. Maryann Elder is a delightfully over-the-top Melanie, and Ron Cuirle poses artfully as Tyler, but the whole scene is contrived and predictable — appropriate for a sitcom, but not a play with more serious aspirations.
Still, director Brian Zoldessy shapes all the moments with care. And Charles Kartali gives Eric the sheen of believability. But he's often forced to simply react to the others, who have better lines than he does ( "I respect books, and people like you who still bother to write them," Alison says). A less passive Eric would have given a better glimpse into the inner workings of this Brooklyn boy.