Words are funny things. For instance, if you Google “marital arts,” you come up with lots of techniques for combat — the search engine assuming that you misspelled martial arts. Of course, the two terms are in truth even closer than that. 

This is the core of 50 Words by Michael Weller, now
concluding a run at the Bang and Clatter Theatre in Cleveland (it
originally ran at their Akron location in February). And the good news
is that the two actors who play the young married couple, Adam and Jan,
have found a rhythm that works beautifully. 

Jazz musicians say they’re “in the pocket” when they are reacting
intuitively to each other, allowing their riffs to blend or stand out
in sharp clarity while developing a fully integrated experience. Sean
Derry and Alanna Romansky are at that point, as they ride the peaks and
valleys of their characters’ relationship in a thoroughly engrossing 75
minutes. 

Adam owns a small architectural firm and Jan is a trained dancer
turned Internet data geek. They have a young son, Greg, who is off on
his first overnight play date. This leaves Mom and Dad alone to do what
they do. And that amounts to some flirting, mixed in with lots of
poison-tipped barbs about each other’s various failings, particularly
his lack of toughness and her bitchiness. 

Indeed, all married relationships are a mixture of love and
aggravation. Playwright Weller knows this, and his play is a compressed
duel. 

Under Sean McConaha’s direction, Derry has grown in the role,
becoming playful and even lovable early on, successfully finding chinks
in Jan’s psychic armor.  And whether Jan smiles or snarls in
return, Romansky keeps Jan a baffling mix of blossoming independence
and abiding neediness. This all comes to a head when a secret is
revealed, and all bets are off. 

50 Words is a picture of two fractured married people working
out their own solutions. As Adam notes, if the Eskimos have 50 words
for snow, there should be at least as many for love.  

arts@clevescene.com

Christine Howey has been reviewing theater since 1997, first at Cleveland Free Times and then for other publications including City Pages in Minneapolis, MN and The Plain Dealer. Her blog, Rave and Pan, also features her play reviews. Christine is a former stage actor and director, primarily at Dobama Theatre.