Barrington Stage Company, Pittsfield, MA
www.barringtonstageco.org
through July 25, 2026
by Jarice Hanson
www.barringtonstageco.org
through July 25, 2026
by Jarice Hanson
As the audience files into the theatre through a back door, onto a stage that looks like a thrift store, there’s a feeling that this show is going to be unlike anything they’ve ever seen before. This may be very true. What the audience is about to see is familiar, revelatory, and profound. It’s also emotionally laden, heart-wrenching, and wonderful.
The world premiere of Keelay Gipson’s “Estate Sale” at Barrington’s intimate St. Germain Stage has something for everyone. The playbill warns that it is a play about grief—which is true—but it is also so much more. The play deals with memory, family, love, loss, and the gifts that growing up in a loving household bestows on the home’s occupants.
Jayson Lee, described in the script as “Executor” is a marvel as the storyteller of the play. He uses a microphone which at first, seems like something an auctioneer would use, but the device also suggests he may tell the story the way a stand-up comic might. He even starts with three jokes that tell the audience he is now an orphan, and his feelings of aloneness are
clear, though implied rather than articulated. This is a clever device to key the audience into the back-and-forth time references that unfold as the characters enter the stage. First, a long-lost friend from the neighborhood called “Youth”. Then Father, “Truth” and Mother, “Beauty” appear. The last two happen to be ghosts.
| Photo: Roman Iwasiska |
This is primarily the Executor’s story, and Lee is a wonderful actor who does a superb job suggesting different ages as he introduces memories, enacted by the other characters.
“Youth” is played by Christopher B. Portley; Father, by Blake Morris; and Mother, by Gillian Glasco. The team of talented actors show the audience the range of emotions of family and friends throughout different time periods and give the impression that they (the actors) have known each other for decades.
They are surrounded by the detritus of life that the Executor now has to deal with; and the items, complete with price tags, are beautifully staged by scenic designer, You-Shin Chen. Director Steph Paul guides her actors around the stage integrating memory and objects and ruminating on the joys and sorrows of family life. What emerges is a story of love, remembered differently through the objects that we imbue with meaning, all the while reminiscing of the small acts of love that ultimately make us who we are.
“Estate Sale” transcends time. The Executor says, “There’s good shit. And there’s bad shit.” The simplicity of those lines hides the multi-layers that emerge as this play evolves. From the audience's reaction, nearly everyone can relate to the emotions that arise as worlds shift with the passing of time, people, and the things that give meaning to an individual's position in the world.
Since this is production is the world premiere, it's a good guess that "Estate Sale" will take to many stages in the near future; perhaps enough to become a modern-day classic. It's that good.
