Theater Review: 'The Boys Next Door' Offers Deft Portrayal Of The Intellectually Challenged - 27 East

Arts & Living

Arts & Living / 1332025

Theater Review: 'The Boys Next Door' Offers Deft Portrayal Of The Intellectually Challenged

icon 3 Photos

author on Mar 25, 2018

Within the first five minutes of Tom Griffin’s “The Boys Next Door,” you become aware that the play is not going to be a drama in the normal sense—with a beginning, middle and end—but instead a gentle episodic drift into the lives of four intellectually challenged men who live together in a group home.

There will be movement in the story, but not much, for their limitations are great. Lucien (an engaging Dorian M. O’Brien) at one point announces that he has a mental capacity “somewhere between a 5-year-old and an oyster,” yet he is inordinately proud of his library card and the books from the library that he will never read.

Arnold (an intense Matthew Conlon) is edgy and nervous, given to emotional highs and lows that change with the speed of turning on a faucet, but he is capable enough to hold a job as an usher at a movie theater. Likewise, Norman (Scott Hofer) has a job at a donut shop. Barry (Spencer Scott) is seemingly the most lucid, but scratch the surface and he is a schizophrenic with unreal plans.

Jack (Paul Velutis), a sympathetic but burned-out supervisor, drops in and out of their home. Periodically, he addresses the audience directly, not only to explain what’s going on, but to let us in on his own frustrations. His soliloquies are overly long and boring, and, anyway, they add nothing to any dramatic tension, sorely lacking in the first act.

A few titters emerging from the audience early on leave us wondering if we should be laughing at all, for we are finding fun in the mental shortcomings of the characters. Yet most comedy is the result of the deficiencies and stupidities of people who otherwise have a normal IQ or above—think Leonard and Sheldon in “The Big Bang Theory”—so who’s to say people on the other side of the spectrum can’t be funny? Not I.

All the actors admirably capture the character of their own “boy” with heartbreaking realism, my husband and I agreed.

I grew up with a neighbor similar to the character Sheila, a woman who visits her fellow mentally challenged adults in the group home, and my husband had faked his way into a state institution while researching a muckraking book on the mental health system in America. These richly drawn portrayals on stage at Quogue Community Hall reminded us of people we both have met and known.

If we had a quibble with the acting, it is with Mr. Conlon, who at times burst past the edges of any character who might be competent enough to hold a job—any job.

The first act hammers home the dissimilar quirks of the “boys,” and the action drifts from one unconnected episode to another with the darkening of the light. The second act plays off their individual mental issues with a separate, and touching, fugue for each.

Lucien will try to convince some sort of committee that he is competent—enough for what, I was never sure—even though he can’t get through that ABC song that kindergartners learn. Yet, in the middle of a befuddled speech, he turns to the audience and is suddenly normal, even eloquent, announcing: “I am here to remind the species of the species. … And without me, without my shattered crippled brain, you will never again be frightened of what you might have become. Or, indeed, by what your future might make you.”

Then he quickly retreats back into Lucien, with the mental capacity of a 5-year-old. It is a telling, tough moment for the audience—there but for the grace of God …

Barry the schizophrenic aspires to give golf lessons to a deaf neighbor, but Barry’s life is upended when his long-absent father comes for a visit. It does not go well.

Arnold, somewhat of a ringleader of the gang, turns grandiose and, in a true break with reality, attempts to run off to Russia, only to have Jack rescue him at the train station.

While all these episodes are sad, the most memorable occurs between Sheila, in a brilliant, edgy characterization by Jessica Howard, and Norman—donut-filled and lovable enough. He is just able to understand, and accept, the growing affection between them. When they dance under the ballroom lighting in their final scene, their love is as true as anyone’s, and you can’t help wondering—now what?

Mr. Hofer played the part nearly three decades earlier in Lindenhurst, and the director of this poignant staging by Hampton Theatre Company, Edward A. Brennan, had gone to see his friend in the role of Norman. Mr. Hofer’s performance then must have matched the daring and deft performance we saw Friday night.

You leave the theater recalling the forlorn Barry on his cot, the delusional Arnold at the train station, and the pathetic, innocent Lucien dimly aware of his limitations. But it is the connection, and dance, between Sheila and Norman that sticks in the mind the morning after.

Will this production be to everyone’s liking? Probably not.

Does it offer a night of thoughtful, haunting theater? Unequivocally, yes.

“The Boys Next Door” continues through April 8 at Quogue Community Hall. Showtimes are Thursdays and Fridays at 7 p.m. and Saturdays at 8 p.m., with matinées Sundays, March 25 and April 8, and Saturdays, March 31 and April 7, at 2:30 p.m. Tickets are $30; $25 for age 65 plus, excluding Saturday evenings; $20 for guests younger than 35 and for theater industry members; and $10 for students younger than 21. Call 866-811-4111 or visit hamptontheatre.org.

You May Also Like:

Take a Chance on ‘ARRIVAL From Sweden’ at The Suffolk

The glitter, the glamour, the unmistakable harmonies of ABBA are coming to The Suffolk when ... 25 Jun 2025 by Staff Writer

Hunt Slonem’s Joyful Menagerie Fills the Grenning Gallery

The Grenning Gallery is currently presenting its annual solo exhibition of celebrated painter Hunt Slonem, ... 24 Jun 2025 by Staff Writer

A New Perspective on Gaslighting: 'Deceived' Reimagines Classic Tale at Bay Street

The term “gaslighting” is defined as manipulation using psychological methods in order to make someone ... by Michelle Trauring

‘Hamptons Summer Songbook By The Sea’ Brings Broadway and Cabaret Stars to LTV This Summer

LTV Studios is set to transform its industrial-chic television space into an intimate concert venue ... by Staff Writer

McCartney Magic Returns: 'Live and Let Die' Recreates Beatlemania at The Suffolk

The Suffolk welcomes back “Live and Let Die: The Music of Paul McCartney” for two ... by Staff Writer

Roberta Piket Brings Jazz Mastery to LTV’s McIver Piano Series

Acclaimed jazz pianist Roberta Piket will headline the McIver Piano Jazz Series at LTV Studios on Monday, July 7, at 6 p.m., offering an intimate solo performance as part of Hamptons JazzFest. The McIver series invites audiences into the LTV Piano Lounge for up-close evenings of music and conversation with jazz piano greats. Piket, a Queens native and daughter of Viennese composer Frederick Piket, brings a dynamic blend of tradition and innovation to the keys. Known for her stylistic versatility, she moves effortlessly between straight-ahead swing, post-bop and the avant-garde. A respected bandleader and composer, Piket studied at Tufts University ... by Staff Writer

PBS Documentary ‘The Bonackers’ Screens June 29 in Springs for Library’s 50th Anniversary

“The Bonackers,” the acclaimed PBS documentary exploring the lives and legacy of East Hampton’s storied ... 23 Jun 2025 by Staff Writer

Bay Street Theater Announces Cast and Crew for ‘Deceived’ and ‘Bonnie & Clyde’

Bay Street Theater has unveiled the complete cast and creative teams for its next two mainstage productions: the noir psychological thriller “Deceived,” which runs June 24 to July 20, and the pulse-pounding musical “Bonnie & Clyde” which takes the stage from July 29 to August 24. Directed by Tony Award-nominee Sheryl Kaller, “‘Deceived’ is a chilling new adaptation of Patrick Hamilton’s “Gaslight,” reimagined by playwrights Johnna Wright and Patty Jamieson. The cast features Mary Bacon (“Coal Country,” “Boardwalk Empire”), Briana Carlson-Goodman (“Les Misérables,” “Hair”), Olivia Cygan (“Doubt,” Steppenwolf Theatre) and Sam Gravitte (“Wicked”). Scenic design is by Jason Ardizzone-West, with ... by Staff Writer

Choral Society Explores Love and Legacy in ‘Songs From the Heart’

The Choral Society of the Hamptons will present “Songs From the Heart,” a concert that explores a rich emotional and musical landscape through works of varied genres and eras, at the Bridgehampton Presbyterian Church on Sunday, June 29, at 5:30 p.m. Under the direction of resident conductor Judith Clurman, the concert will feature a blend of choral music scored for string quartet and piano. The chorus will be joined by the CSH String Quartet — Song-A Cho, Ann Bermont, Christopher Shaughnessy, James Acomporo — and pianist Jeremy Robbin Lyons. Featured soloists for the evening include Amy Justman, Heather Jones, Jason ... by Staff Writer

‘Spider Couple: Psychoanalysis and Animal Imagery in Louise Bourgeois’s Work’ Explored at The Church

The Church will host an intimate afternoon of art, psychoanalysis and dialogue on Sunday, July ... by Staff Writer