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Kvetch by Steven Berkoff
article by Heather Wisner
SF Weekly (April 15, 1998)
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- A Fine Whine
- British playwright Steven Berkoff has a tart comeback for anyone who
shrugs and says they can't complain: Sure you can. You probably will anyway.
In Berkoff's comedy Kvetch, married couple Frank and Donna do it all evening
at a dinner party where resentment cloaked in socially acceptable chitchat
gives way to outright recrimination. Donna thinks Frank is neglecting her
to attend to his own needs; Frank's hectic commute to his grueling job
as a corporate salesman has left him too drained to respond to Donna's
demands. Frank's flatulent mother-in-law, recently divorced co-worker Hal,
and pesky client George add to his woes and the general chorus of complaint
over humanity's failings.
- Berkoff's previous works Greek, East, and West targeted London's working
class within the context of British society, but Kvetch -- with its insecure,
disillusioned characters bitching about work, family, sex, and the general
messiness of life -- has a universal appeal (it was one of the longest-running
comedies in L.A. after it opened at the Odyssey in 1987). Teatro Shalom
stages the San Francisco premiere of the work, which opens Thursday at
8 p.m. (and runs through May 2) at Exit Stage Left, 156 Eddy (at Mason),
S.F. Admission is $10-12; call 602-4387.
-- Heather Wisner
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