Wendy Lippe and Kenny Kelleher Swoon for Psych Drama Company's Immersive 'Stage Kiss'
Kenny Kelleher and Wendy Lippe star in Psych Drama Company's production of Sarah Ruhl's "Stage Kiss" Source: Heroun & Co

Wendy Lippe and Kenny Kelleher Swoon for Psych Drama Company's Immersive 'Stage Kiss'

Kilian Melloy READ TIME: 8 MIN.

There's something seductive and wild about a Sarah Ruhl play, whether it's the electrifying feminist lens of "Eurydice" (recently the basis of Matthew Aucoin's opera of the same name, which was nominated for a Grammy last year), the discontents of our digital age with "Dead Man's Cell Phone," or a novel spin on the domestic comedy with "The Clean House."

The Pulitzer-nominated playwright's "Stage Kiss" is among Ruhl's most provocative and emotional plays, delving into the "showmance" of two actors caught up in the passions of a vintage play about love and death – and caught up in their own unresolved, decades-ago romance. All the world's a stage in this exploration of love and art, and it's on the stage that reality and performance start to merge.

Psych Drama Company's immersive production of "Stage Kiss" brings those passions to the audience by bringing the audience into the midst of the action. Stars Wendy Lippe (also the company's founding artistic director) and Kenny Kelleher talked all about it with EDGE.

EDGE: What is the appeal of doing a Sarah Ruhl play?

Wendy Lippe: I think it's important that, as a company, for 15 years, we were committed to exclusively producing some of the most important and challenging dramatic works from Shakespeare and the American greats. I don't know of many theater companies that have dedicated themselves exclusively to productions of this kind. But the times we are living in demand that our company broaden the landscape of the works we do. Ruhl's "Stage Kiss" allows us to work with the psychologically powerful and meaningful themes of love, loss, memory, and fantasy, but it does so with levity, humor, quirkiness and joy. I hope that our production honors the impressive emotional range of Ruhl's text, and that we integrate the comedy and drama in a way that captures a very human and universal journey.


by Kilian Melloy , EDGE Staff Reporter

Kilian Melloy serves as EDGE Media Network's Associate Arts Editor and Staff Contributor. His professional memberships include the National Lesbian & Gay Journalists Association, the Boston Online Film Critics Association, The Gay and Lesbian Entertainment Critics Association, and the Boston Theater Critics Association's Elliot Norton Awards Committee.

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