LakehouseRanchDotPNG Premieres Mackenzie Raine Kirkman's Push. in Miami | Miami New Times
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Science Weighs in on a Divorce in LakehouseRanch's Push.

Absurdist theater company LakehouseRanchDotPNG embraces greater realism with its fifth play, Mackenzie Raine Kirkman's Push.
Lucy Marie Lopez and Michael Fernandez play a divorcing couple in the world premiere of Mackenzie Raine Kirkman's Push.
Lucy Marie Lopez and Michael Fernandez play a divorcing couple in the world premiere of Mackenzie Raine Kirkman's Push. Photo by Juan Gamero
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In a second season filled with world premieres, Miami's LakehouseRanchDotPNG has already presented four plays that, to varying degrees, focused on absurdist or experimental theater.

The young company, mostly made up of Florida International University theater grads, is, for the moment, embracing greater realism with its fifth play, Mackenzie Raine Kirkman's Push.

With three performances remaining in a two-weekend run that began January 12, Push. is a play worth seeking out. The company's intimate rented space at Artistic Vibes in a Kendall-area warehouse district serves the play about a divorcing couple going through mediation; the audience's proximity to the action dials up both discomfort and empathy as it learns the details of a shattered relationship.

Science and/or a whiff of absurdism enter the picture via the Mediator (Pedro Urquia), an official (court-appointed, maybe?) whose job it is to get the couple talking about their marriage so he can submit a report on whether the divorce should be granted.
click to enlarge Pedro Urquia in the production of Push
Pedro Urquia is the Mediator in the LakehouseRanchDotPNG world premiere of Mackenzie Raine Kirkman's Push.
Photo by Juan Gamero
He explains, pleasantly enough, the strict rules about how the session will be conducted. And he has help: A button at the center of the table where the couple is sitting lights up if it detects a lie or significant omission, giving the spouse who hasn't been talking the chance to push the button and force the other to tell the truth. Not sure how that works, but it's a device that inevitably takes the discussion deeper.

The warring characters are called Dad (Michael "Mikey" Fernandez) and Mom (Lucy Marie Lopez). At this fraught moment (and Dad's late for the session, which doesn't help), they're understandably tense and combative. But as the Mediator gets them talking about the earlier days of their meeting and marriage, the audience comes to understand why these opposites were attracted to each other and how the embers of love can still glow.

Artistic director Brandon Urrutia, who staged the play, cast it with actors who artfully convey the essence of their characters, often without words.

The willowy Lopez, who doubles as costume designer, lets her hand caress her small belly now and then, and in the course of the play, we learn that Mom is expecting a baby girl (as is Lopez herself).

When Mom rails at how little her husband does around the house, how the day-to-day responsibility for their two boys is all hers, and how Dad doesn't even know where various household items are kept, she seems thoroughly exhausted and overwhelmed. (The household item mystery is a common one at my house and at the home of a friend who once asked his wife where the linen closet was.)
click to enlarge Lucy Marie Lopez in the production of Push
Lucy Marie Lopez as Mom tries to make sense of her conflicting impulses in the world premiere of Mackenzie Raine Kirkman's Push.
Photo by Juan Gamero
As Dad, Fernandez is all edgy irritation, at first bouncing one leg as he speaks, yelling instead of calmly speaking, violating the prohibition against vulgar language. Heavily tattooed, radiating a volatile strength, Dad seems dangerous at times. But as the actor sorts through more tender memories, Fernandez becomes the man who wishes the divorce wasn't happening.

LakehouseRanchDotPNG sticks with the simplest of design elements for Push. Indy Sulleiro's set consists of a white-painted wall, a long table holding three bottles of water, and that all-important button. Urrutia's lighting design and Kyran Wright's sound enhance the conference-room feel of the space.

Though it follows a more familiar stylistic path than most LakehouseRanchDotPNG plays, Push. showcases the company at its best.

Kirkman's writing is insightful and, particularly for anyone who has endured the end of a marriage, quite accurate. (Parents take note: Due to some of the play's language and subjects, Push. is OK for teens but not younger kids.)

Under Urrutia's direction, Urquia is exactly as officious as a Mediator should be, Fernandez is both scary and vulnerable as Dad, and Lopez is the quintessential Mom ready to shed her biggest "kid." Bravo.

Push. 8 p.m. Friday through Saturday and 2 p.m. Sunday through January 21, at Artistic Vibes, 8846 SW 129th Ter., Suite B, Miami; 786-427-4721; lakehouseranchdotpng.com. Tickets cost $20.
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