The Bi-Co (Bi-College) Theater Program of Haverford College and Bryn Mawr College will doing six performances of “Gruesome Playground Injuries,” starting on Friday (November 12).
According to the Bryn Mawr College Website – Gruesome Playground Injuries by Rajiv Joseph is the fast-paced, intense story of Kayleen and Doug, two characters whose intertwined histories and romantic tension play out over scenes that span different ages in their lives. Bouncing between grade school interactions and adult clashes, the play races toward a desperately consequential final reckoning in their lives. An ensemble of actors will bring this poignantly turbulent story to life by not only inhabiting the two characters at their varied ages but shifting the stage to create the different settings of their lives.
The play was written by Rajiv Joseph and was first performed Off-Broadway in 2011. At that time, Ben Brantley wrote in the New York Times –
[“Gruesome Playground Injuries] follows the decades-spanning relationship of two made-for-each-other masochists who, between them, manage to slice, bloody, bruise and/or mutilate most parts of the human anatomy.
In this context, when a boy asks a girl (or vice versa), “Can I touch it?,” the “it” in question is not in the usual erogenous zones. An open sore of some kind, or a newly emptied eye socket, is what draws Kayleen (Jennifer Carpenter) and Doug (Pablo Schreiber) into mutual, fascinated exploration. Though their friendship remains, by conventional standards, platonic, these two know that physical agony can be more bonding than sex.
Kayleen and Doug meet wounded as children in a parochial school infirmary, and are reunited during the next 30 years in a mental institution, a funeral parlor and assorted hospital rooms. Each vignette in this easily flowing, intermissionless show, directed by Scott Ellis, has its own title (projected in supertitles), establishing the characters’ ages and a new injury one or the other has sustained, as in “Eight: Face Split Open” and “Twenty-Three: Eye Blown Out.” A breezy, somberly sentimental series of blackout sketches, the play is just asking to be retitled “Same Time, Next Scar.”
Directed by Akeem Davis
Friday–Sunday, Nov. 12-14, 2021
Thursday–Saturday, Nov. 18-20, 2021
All performances at 7:30 p.m.
Hepburn Teaching Theater, Goodhart Hall