There have been many plays and musicals that attempt to show how the hopes of youth become shattered with age, including one of my favorite musicals Merrily We Roll Along. Simon Gray's 1984 play The Common Pursuit is one whose message of shattered dreams slowly sneaks up on you. The Off Broadway revival that just ended a three month run was fortunate to have a fairly consistent ensemble of actors playing the group of five men and one woman who meet at Cambridge with the plan to form a literary magazine that will challenge those around them. The challenges of real life and the impact of society affect everyone but when they touch upon the ideas of youth it is even more shattering. The main characters of the play are Stuart and Martin. It is Stuart's idea to start the magazine and Martin, who desires a career in publishing, becomes the business man for the magazine. The play follows their two lives, as well as the four other characters who are part of the magazine, over twenty years. Over the years we see Stuart's struggles with getting funding for the magazine and how he eventually forms a publishing company with Martin's urging. While the other characters also have struggles of their own, mainly to do with career and relationship choices, it is really the relationship between Stuart and Martin who ground the play. It is their struggles and the fact that Stuart is the more creative one and Martin the more business focused that also adds another layer to the play, the struggles between the creative and the commercial.
Jacob Fishel, Josh Cooke, Lucas Near-Verbrugghe, Kieran Campion, Kristen Bush and Tim McGeever |
Josh Cooke and Jacob Fishel |
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