Zingology

Tag: The Salt Girl

The Salt Girl, Boston Playwrights’ Theatre

by Chava on Nov.09, 2009, under Reviews

The Salt Girl
written by and featuring John Kuntz
directed by David R. Gammons
November 5-22, 2009

It was just a month ago when I saw John Kuntz in the Nora Theater’s production of The Caretakers, and after seeing The Salt Girl, at The Boston Playwright’s Theatre, I can’t say enough but his range as an actor, but I’d also attest to his skill as a playwright. The Salt Girl, both written and performed by Kuntz, is a monologue, weaving past, present, and future hopes of his main character, Quint, in a semblance of the state of human consciousness. Although there were some dream sequences that I think could be left out, substituted with more actual conversations with Quint’s father who is portrayed one-dimensionally, for the most part the script was insightful, ranging from dark humor to morose reminiscences.

Quint is a complex character obsessed with death. The script touches of the deaths of his family members as well as Quint’s serious consideration of ending his own life. We see Quint as a child, a teenager, and an adult; as a reticent, suicidal, lost soul and as a high energy, sexualized dancer in a Panda costume. Through the TV sets used on shelves in the background, we gain further understanding of Quint’s experience, and in a no-big-deal nude scene, the baby on the screen, in the most powerful of all the images, suggests that Quint’s returned to his innocence. In the end, Quint turns into a pillar of salt, since he has in fact, been looking back, but Kuntz, unlike Quint, should only look forward with this very creative and insightful piece.

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