A Little Life (c) Julieta Cervantes
Theater Review: A Little Life
BAM
Premise: Hanya Yanagihara’s wildly popular 2015 novel “A Little Life” revolves around a group of male friends in New York City, representing various points of the sexuality and racial spectrum (although, curiously, none of the major characters were Asian). There is the talented gay painter, JB (Majd Mardo); the straight, rising movie star Willem (Maarten Heijmans); the bisexual, biracial architect Malcolm (Edwin Jonker); and the sexually ambivalent lawyer Jude (Ramsey Nasr). It takes a while for the novel (which is over 800 pages long) to clue us in as to whose narrative will take over the story, but thankfully director Ivo van Hove and writer Koen Tachelet immediately let us know that the play (which is over four hours long) will focus on Jude. He immediately talks to the audience as well as have discussions with a social worker (Marieke Heebink) about how he handled certain situations with his friends. Although he has occasional trouble walking, he has told his friends he will never discuss his past. (This frustrates JD the most as he made Jude, whom he secretly has a crush on, the subject of an evocative painting.) But things start to unravel when Jude’s mentor Harold (Jacob Derwin) agrees to adopt Jude to give him stability (Harold’s wife Julia, like most of the novel’s female characters, is missing on stage). As happy as this makes Jude, he starts to spiral emotionally as he is finally getting the happy ending he always wanted but doesn’t believe he deserves. We see his childhood in flashbacks to a Catholic orphanage and the many (many!) abuses he faced there. Even his self-harm coping mechanism of cutting himself is not calming his chaotic brain, which prompts his doctor Andy (Bart Skegers) to throw up red flags for his friends to intervene.