Mi Kang at Nao in A Tale for the Time Being (John Ulman) |
A Tale for the Time
Being
Book-It Repertory Theatre
Through October 9, 2016
Book-It’s new production, A Tale for the Time Being, adapted from the Ruth Ozeki novel by Laura Ferri, is a heart-breaking and
mesmerizing story. Book-It hired Desdemona
Chiang to direct it, which was a great move, because she helps create a
fluid and graceful rhythm to the production.
The tale has many flavors, including dark ones, but is all
told first-person by Nao (Mi Kang),
a sixteen year old in Japan, through her diary that has floated, carefully
wrapped in plastic and a Hello Kitty lunchbox from Japan to the coast of
Canada. A writer, Ruth (Mariko Kita)
finds the package floating near her island home and becomes obsessed with the
contents of the lunchbox.
Her husband, Oliver (a warmly geeky Michael Patten), contextualizes the lunchbox’s potential travel
from the tsunami-wrecked Japan to Canada, and adds key moments of bird lore
about various crow species that wind through the tale. Ruth reads passages of
diary to Oliver as they try to unwind the mystery of Nao’s life.