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Living thing

Amy Lynn Budd tackles a tumor in My Brain
By BILL RODRIGUEZ  |  April 29, 2009

090510_Brain_m
DETERMINED: Lewis (top) and Budd. 

Some people feel uncomfortable dealing with those, even friends, who look and act normal but are among the walking wounded with some deadly disease or another. They don't know what to say. A fringe benefit of Amy Lynn Budd's The Thing That Ate My Brain . . . Almost, at Perishable Theatre through May 10, is that Budd is demonstrating to them that such victims don't tend to wallow in self-pity. Self-deprecating humor, dark and blunt, is a time-tested coping mechanism that has the side benefit of making sickness, and the sick, approachable by others.

Subtitled "A Neo-Burlesque Sci-Fi Extravaganza," and directed briskly by Connie Crawford, we get everything from fringe-shaking go-go dancing to a sexy, vampirish villainess. Clearly, this is about living.

It is 1-1/2 extravagant hours, indeed, if only because it presents itself as being directed by 1950s schlockmeister Ed Wood, who is making a film of the life of her disease. Before the show, we see clips from his legendarily low-tech and faux-scary Plan 9 from Outer Space, and from Glen or Glenda, a documentary account of transvestism that was unintentionally hilarious not only because Wood played Glenda in drag but also, and ironically, due to its heartfelt sympathy.

Those films beautifully set up Budd's fears here, not the one about dying — that's a background drumroll that can remain unspoken — but of having a profoundly serious subject laughed at rather than with. (Wood was himself a transvestite, and he wanted his Plan 9 sci-fi/horror mashup to be better than it turned out.) A filmed introduction of Perishable artistic director Vanessa Gilbert, in scarlet lipstick and in shadows, sets the "Mwahhahaha!" tone perfectly, as she declares that the theater is not responsible for any ensuing heart attacks.

The first action we see is also spot-on: Budd, playing herself, jiggling to beat the band in fringed bikini and lime-green vinyl go-go boots. Actually, she is imagining being her mother back in her carpe diem youth. (Mom's tumors started popping up when she was 15, not 28 like Lynn, which adds another unspoken dimension of guilt.)

Budd's wanting to remain attractive and vivacious comes out in such activity rather than dialogue. While filming her, director Wood (Brien Lang) has to remind her that she is playing "a bombshell with a brain tumor," and she's momentarily forgotten that she wrote the script.

Wanting to take over the story, for purposes of metaphor as well as solipsistic self-regard, is Voldemort (Sarah Lewis), her brain tumor that wears a coal-black Elvis wig. When Budd tells her to go to hell, her tumor reminds her that a soul is required for that undertaking, so if anyone is going to hell it's Budd herself. Nice. It's jokey enough that a rimshot could have followed, but it's also a glimpse into Budd's reality.

An earlier version of this play, staged at Perishable three years ago, was one-third the length as it took us through the same trip. This 90 minutes doesn't seem padded, nor does it waste time as it wheels us in and out of hospitals and through the playwright's experiences, as well as that of her mother, who died of the same hereditary disease at 44. We see lots of family photos, another way that mother and daughter merge.

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  Topics: Theater , Elvis Presley, Ed Wood, Lord Voldemort,  More more >
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