A Body of Water

A Body of Water
Off-Broadway promotional poster
Written byLee Blessing
CharactersAvis
Moss
Wren
Date premieredJuly 15, 2005 (2005-07-15)
Place premieredThe Guthrie Theater, Minneapolis
Original languageEnglish
SubjectExistentialism, marriage, memory
GenrePsychological drama

A Body of Water is a play by Lee Blessing. Originally premiering at The Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis, on July 15, 2005. Directed by Ethan McSweeny, the production featured Michael Learned, Edward Herrmann, and Michelle O'Neill.[1] In February 2006, the play was subsequently produced by The Old Globe in San Diego, CA. Directed by McSweeney, the production featured Sandy Duncan, Ned Schmidtke, and Samantha Soule.

A Body of Water made its Off-Broadway at Primary Stages in September 2008. Directed by Maria Mileaf, the production featured Christine Lahti, Michael Cristofer, and Laura Odeh.[2] The play won the Harold and Mimi Steinberg/ATCA New Play Award.[3]

Characters

  • Avis
  • Moss
  • Wren

Plot

Avis and Moss, a middle aged couple, wake up in an isolated summer house overlooking a large body of water, with no memory of who they are or how they arrived there. As they attempt to reconstruct their identities, they speculate about their relationship to one another, inventing and revising possible pasts that range from ordinary domestic life to darker, more sinister scenarios.

Their fragile attempts at self-definition are disrupted by the arrival of a young man named Wren, who claims to know each of them. Wren provides a series of explanations about their identities and mysterious circumstances, but her accounts are inconsistent and often contradictory, ultimately raising more questions than answers. As Avis and Moss struggle to determine with stories, if any, are true, they become both increasingly dependent on Wren and increasingly suspicious of her motives.

Over the course of the play, shifting narratives bur the lines between reality and fabrication. Avis and Moss repeatedly recalibrate their understanding of themselves and each other, confronting unsettling possibilities about their pas actions and moral character. Their lack of identity and unstable memories become increasingly fragile, as the revelation of each new “truth” undermines the last. Ultimately, the play offers no definitive resolution, leaving the characters (and the audience) uncertain of what is “real.” The story concludes with Avis and Moss trapped in a cycle of doubt, suggesting that human identity may be constructed as much through storytelling as through “objective fact.”

Production history

The Guthrie Theater, Minneapolis

A Body of Water had its world premiere at The Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis, Minnesota, running from June 11 – July 3, 2005. Directed by Ethan McSweeny, the production featured Michael Learned, Edward Herrmann, and Michelle O'Neill. The creative team included Michael Vaughn Sims (sets), Rich Hamson (costumes), Matthew Reinert (lighting) and Michael Roth (original music and sound).[4]

The Old Globe, San Diego

A Body of Water was produced by The Old Globe in San Diego, California, running from February 11 - March 19, 2006. Directed by Ethan McSweeny, the production featured Sandy Duncan, Ned Schmidtke, and Samantha Soule. The creative team included Michael Vaughn Sims (sets), Charlotte Devaux (costumes), York Kennedy (lighting) and Michael Roth (original music and sound).[5]

Primary Stages, Off-Broadway

A Body of Water made its Off-Broadway premiere with Primary Stages at 59E59 Theaters, running from September 30 – November 9, 2008. Directed by Maria Mileaf, the production featured Christine Lahti, Michael Cristofer, and Laura Odeh. The creative team included Neil Patel (sets), Candice Donnelly (costumes), Jeff Croiter (lighting), and Bart Fasbender (original music and sound).[6]

Reception

The play's various productions have received mostly positive reviews from critics, particularly for Blessing's script, McSweeney and Mileaf's direction, and the actors performances.

Peter Ritter of Variety praised the play, writing,

"In Lee Blessing's new drama a middle-aged man and woman awake one morning to find themselves in an unfamiliar house on a mountain surrounded by water. Blessing uses this lonely island aerie as the central metaphor in a quietly unsettling existential mystery... A Body of Water is, obviously, a play rich in ideas about memory, identity and fiction. The three are bound in a Gordian knot, it turns out: Without the reference points of memory, identity is a fiction, yet memory itself is nothing more than a story we tell about the past. If Blessing doesn’t develop all these ideas as fully as he might, he does lay a rich philosophical groundwork for the play’s intrigue."[7]

Philip Brandes of The Los Angeles Times offered positive sentiments, noting "Blessing’s new ending adds startling dramatic momentum to the abstract metaphysical contemplation... There’s certainly enough upheaval these days to make audiences relate to the heightened sense of untethered reality in A Body of Water... The play ultimately begets more questions than answers, leaving it up to each viewer to decide whether possessing a stable identity is a curse or a blessing."[8]

In a more negative review, Charles Isherwood of The New York Times criticized the script, writing, "Midway through “A Body of Water,” a puzzle play by Lee Blessing that opened on Tuesday night at 59E59 Theaters, you may conclude that it would be better for all if Mr. Blessing just shoveled the pieces back in the box and returned it to the game closet. This sputtering drama about a man and a woman who wake up one day with matching cases of amnesia is ultimately so, er, forgettable that its resolution ceases to be a matter of suspense long before it arrives."[9]

Awards

Year Association Award Recipient Result Ref.
2006 American Theatre Critics Association Harold and Mimi Steinberg/ATCA New Play Award Lee Blessing Won [10]
2007 Craig Noel Awards Outstanding Dramatic Production The Old Globe Won [11]
Outstanding Direction of a Play Ethan McSweeny Won [11]
Outstanding Ensemble Sandy Duncan, Ned Schmidtke, & Samantha Soule Won [11]

References

  1. ^ Peterson, John. "Theater Review: A Body of Water". Talkin' Broadway. Retrieved April 3, 2026.
  2. ^ "A Body of Water". Concord Theatricals. Retrieved April 3, 2026.
  3. ^ Hernandez, Ernio (2006). "Blessing's Body of Water Wins 2006 Steinberg New Play Award; Rapp, Wilson Also Honored". Playbill. Retrieved April 3, 2026.
  4. ^ Hernandez, Ernio (May 2005). "Michael Learned to Star in Blessing's Body of Water at Guthrie, June 11–July 3". Playbill. Retrieved April 3, 2026.
  5. ^ "Body of Water Press Photos". The Old Globe Press Archive. Retrieved April 3, 2026.
  6. ^ Hernandez, Ernio (October 14, 2008). "Blessing's A Body of Water, with Christine Lahti, Opens Off-Broadway Oct. 14". Playbill. Retrieved April 3, 2026.
  7. ^ Ritter, Peter (2005). "A Body of Water". Variety. Retrieved April 3, 2026.
  8. ^ Myers, Victoria (February 20, 2020). "Review: 'A Body of Water' at Actors Co-op". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved April 3, 2026.
  9. ^ Isherwood, Charles (October 15, 2008). "Theater Review: A Body of Water". The New York Times. Retrieved April 3, 2026.
  10. ^ "Steinberg/ATCA New Play Award". American Theatre Critics Association. Retrieved April 3, 2026.
  11. ^ a b c "Bogart, Duncan, James McAnuff et al. Win San Diego Critics Awards". TheaterMania. Retrieved April 3, 2026.

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