Chelsea Altman in Gone Home
(Photo: Joan Marcus)
The story begins on a living room set. A young woman named Kate (Chelsea Altman) holds the hands of a distracted young man named Jack (Josh Hamilton). She tells him not to worry, using words such as "comfortable," "casual," "relaxed," and "familiar" to describe their surroundings. At first, the audience has no reason to believe that she's describing anything other than what we see, but we soon come to understand that the living room is strictly in Jack's mind. We do understand from Kate's initial remarks that Jack is in some sort of medical facility. Why? What's wrong with him? These are things we won't learn until much later in the play.
Corwin holds back key information in an attempt to establish a sense of mystery, teasing us with lines like "Why did you come home when you said it would be over your dead body?" The plot is pretty much a straight line -- or, rather, a flat line -- and the often precious dialogue takes us out of the play in order for Corwin to show us how clever he thinks he is.
Without giving too much away, Gone Home is about forgiveness. Jack left home after a fight with his parents when he was 18 and has been out of touch with his family ever since, but now he is seriously ill and therefore feels a deep need to communicate with them. His mother (Kellie Overbey), father (Rob Campbell), and sister (Callie Thorne) come back into his life in a combination of memory and imagination. Director David Warren heightens and pinpoints this device by having these characters enter James Youmans's purposefully spare set without walking through any doors; they arrive through open space, as if out of a dream.
Josh Hamilton and Rob Campbell in Gone Home
(Photo: Joan Marcus)
Finally, for all of the play's faults, give the author credit for having the conviction to see it through to its exceedingly dark, heart-stopping finale.