Spoilers ahoy!
Warsaw by Paul Webb just premiered in Long Beach, a very humane drama entwining love, grief, guilt, forgiveness, and genuine fear. I have very mixed feelings about it--but anything I might say may come across as nit-picking. Maybe it is.
The play centers around a Doctor (Anna Van Valin) and a Priest (Bruce Nozick) who talk while one of the former's patients is being slowly awakened from a medically induced coma following a horrible car accident. Said patient, Krystina (Suzanne Ford) left a powerful impression on both these folks, not least because the Doctor right now is going through a horrific breakup with David (Eric Scoufaras), which involved the death of her brother. She blames herself and David for her brother's death. Meanwhile as Krystyna starts to emerge from her coma, she has dreams in which she is in therapy discussing her marriage, her politics, her background in general.
Plenty of surprises proceed to pop up. For example, both the brother's death and the accident which crushed so much of Krystyna's body were directly caused by nothing less than 9/11! We begin to realize before long this is 2001, in the wake of the attack. More, though, all this begins also to entwine with the Warsaw Uprising in 1944! Hence the title! Meanwhile we meet and get to know the very nice young man (Spenser Del Carmen) who was driving the truck in Krystyna's accident.
But the heart of this story is a series of coincidences (or destiny) bringing the past and (more or less) present together. Let me be very clear--that was cool. As an inspiration, as a story, as an idea this makes for juicy stuff, the stuff of sometimes great theatre.
Would it were indeed great.
Not that is is by any stretch of the imagination bad. Not at all! But the complexity of the setting and background do get in the way--more, I would argue some elements of the play don't quite work. Some of this script frankly requires threading rather a lot of needles to create the impact I think the writer strives for. I don't believe all those needled ended up threaded, and my suspicion remains the play did not need all those needles. One was a trap the play contains and which the production fell into--namely, sentiment versus honesty. Two love stories run in a weird tandem throughout. Me, I love weird, and thought the parallel stories should have worked. In my view, neither quite landed. A lot of those stories for example were explained rather than seen--although the production tried to show what they could.
Again, you may call this nitpicking. Again, I want to emphasize this is neither a bad play nor a bad production. Yet again, what I'm writing about are a cluster of nuances which makes this play not achieve a bullseye.
More, your mileage may vary. The love story are clearly meant to offer hope and insight--which they can do. The interplay of the Holocaust with the attack on the World Trade Center intrigues and provokes thought. Not one actor gives a bad performance, and we end up liking these characters.
I just feel the script needed some major polishing.
Warsaw plays Thursdays/Fridays/Saturdays @ 7:30 p.m. & Sundays @ 2 p.m until May 17, 2026 at the International City Theatre, Long Beach Convention & Entertainment Center’s Beverly O’Neill Theater, 330 E. Seaside Way, Long Beach, CA 90802



