TOWER OF BABBLE
reviewed by David Johnston
Tower of Babble, writer-director-performer Jennifer Ostrega's one-woman
FringeNYC offering, is a smart, likeable, and poisonous little show.
Ostrega offers a peek into the workday lives of several employees at
a corporate monolith with an unnamed function, Tower of Babble.
As a writer, Ostrega has a great ear for the casual cruelties and absurdities
of corporate America, where employees are downsized, then sent off to
a ten-minute counseling session with a yoga teacher. There's something
for everyone who's ever raged at the machine here.
Parts are wickedly inspired, and speak of a sharply observed personal
experience. One employee deals with an irate person on the phone, who
demands to speak to her supervisor. Ostrega dutifully puts the person
on hold, stands up and bursts into an exuberant choreographed dance
for several minutes, then sits back down and tells her caller that the
supervisor isn't available at this time. A human resources drone tells
a new interviewee that she works so hard, she hasn't had time to change
her tampon five days after her period. A sunny West Virginia "branding"
specialist cheerfully pink slips her employees in the midst of a presentation.
As a performer, Ostrega's characterizations lean towards the cartoonish,
but like all good comedians she shows us the glimpses of pain and desperation
underneath these people's lives. She is also very, very good at the
casual, throwaway line that speaks volumes.
Jennifer Ostrega knows what FringeNYC is for. Tower of Babble could
use some tightening and sharpening. She knows these characters but doesn't
always dig deep enough to satisfy her audience. There are the occasional
awkward transitions, par for the course in one-performer shows. No matter.
Ostrega is perceptive, generous, and funny. Hopefully, this run will
help and encourage this talented young artist to put a few coats of
polish on the work. It's all it needs.