Synopsis
Carbondale Dreams
Published by Dramatists Play Service
4 Male 4 Female
At first the reunion seems to be a typical Jewish family get-together, with much discussion of food and the problems of providing for growing children. But David's arrival also serves as a catalyst which provokes the explosive airing of deeper tensions and animosities, apparently ready to burst forth at the slightest provocation
The father, Arnie, regrets that his long hours at his store, making money for his family's benefit, cut him off from really knowing his children; and while his wife, Barone, professes to derive great joy from her offspring, it is soon evident that she has never really understood or appreciated them
As for the children, daughter Beth is a compulsive eater trapped in a loveless marriage with a self-indulgent husband, Barry, who berates her for weakness while denying nothing to himself; and son Bradley is a would-be rock musician who works for his father but dreams of the "big hit" that will rescue him from Carbondale
Meanwhile he and his alcoholic wife, Cindi, find solace in cocaine and compulsive over-spending. And while they all turn to David, the one who has "escaped" to a supposedly better life, to help them find a purpose in their own, it is apparent that he is as helpless to save them from themselves as they are to understand the tangled motives that have brought them to where - and what - they are
Sometimes funny, sometimes poignant, this resourceful tragicomedy builds steadily in intensity as it probes into the lives of a middle western family for whom the American Dream has, almost unaccountably, become a nightmare
A long run Off-Broadway success, the play deftly explores the tensions between family togetherness and individual yearnings - and the damaging excesses which too easy affluence can lead to
"This is theatre at its most enjoyable, where nothing jars, and everything conspires to make you think and think again, and feel" ~ NY Native
" a study in deterioration and entrapment that makes a strong statement " ~ NY Times