'Body Awareness Week," as Professor Phyllis explains at the start of the Wilma Theater's production of Body Awareness, offers "a chance for everyone at Shirley State to just check in." But in Annie Baker's compassionate comic drama about a lesbian couple, their son Jared, who may or may not have Asperger's syndrome, and a photographer who brings his "male gaze" to the festivities, the shallow political correctness of "checking in" leads to a much deeper excavation.
This is the first full-length play Baker wrote after graduating from NYU (her third, along with Circle Mirror Transformation and The Aliens - presented earlier this season by Theatre Exile - to be set in Vermont), and though her intimate script spies on both their kitchen table and their pillow talk, its women, Phyllis (Grace Gonglewski) and Joyce (Mary Martello), tend to behave according to their prescribed roles. Phyllis, the didactic feminist, reacts with strident outrage at Frank Bonitatibus' (Christopher Coucill) work - photos of unconventional female nudes - while Joyce, Jared's divorced biological mother, flirts with the artist. The actors, however, warm both characters to their full 98.6 degrees, Gonglewski giving Phyllis a disarming neurotic streak, and Martello softening Joyce with gentle eyes and sad smiles.