Rachael Lewis, Heather Edmiston and Janine Burgener play bridesmaids seeking refuge from a wedding reception.
Rachael Lewis, Heather Edmiston and Janine Burgener play bridesmaids seeking refuge from a wedding reception.

OK, the five actresses in Brรผka Theatreโ€™s production of Five Women Wearing the Same Dress arenโ€™t literally wearing the same dress. Thereโ€™s no voluminous tent big enough for a bowling team.

The playโ€™s title refers to five similar dressesโ€”pink Bridesmaid Barbie gownsโ€”on five women whose sizes and shapes vary. The dresses, with matching pill box hats, arenโ€™t the womenโ€™s garments of choice.

โ€œI look like a โ€˜ho from The Twilight Zone,โ€ quips Mindy (played by Kahele). Mindy is the lesbian sister of the groom.

The glorious occasion is Tracyโ€™s wedding, a Southern middle-class shindig. We never meet Tracy, never see the $6,000 wedding dress she bought with her own earnings from her swank job at Pepsi. Instead, weโ€™re flies on the wall of a bedroom belonging to Tracyโ€™s kid sister, Meredith (Janine Burgener).

Meredith is a recent college grad who wears a black leather jacket over her pink dress and has a Malcolm X poster over her bed. When we first meet her, sheโ€™s trying to remember where she hid her pot.

Before long, all the women are hiding out in Meredithโ€™s room, looking out her window at the receptionโ€™s goings on.

โ€œThe bland leading the bland,โ€ Meredith says, hunting for a lighter.

The five women wander in and out of the bedroom with champagne and cake. The eventโ€™s heightened emotions gives each woman a chance to break down, tell stories and bond with new friends.

Georgeanne (Rachael Lewis) tells about her relationship with the brideโ€™s ex-boyfriend Tommy Valentine, whoโ€™d gotten her knocked up in college. She tells of going, by herself, to have an abortion.

More recently, the now-married Georgeanne ran into Tommy at a bar. This led to a loving interlude in a parking lot, near a Dumpster.

โ€œI will never ever be able to smell garbage again without thinking of Tommy,โ€ she says.

The women get stoned and drunkโ€”except for Frances (Jamie Plunkett) a teetotalinโ€™ Baptist sort who doesnโ€™t use likker or drugs. Frances gets a makeover.

Diehard party girl Trisha (Heather Edmiston) carries a purse full of condoms and a determination to let no man get the best of her. Of course, sheโ€™s the one at risk of falling in loveโ€”with Tripp (John Rutski).

Each of the six cast members is stunningly adept in her or his role. Southern accents arenโ€™t overwhelmingโ€”and arenโ€™t forgotten halfway through the second act.

Plunkett is hilariously self-righteous as the ultra- conservative Frances, swooning over costume jewelry that looks like real diamonds, not missing a chance to evangelize her comrades and expressing shock that Mindyโ€™s a lesbian.

โ€œShe looks like a real woman!โ€

The playโ€™s attention to comedic detail bears the mark of playwright Alan Ball. Five Women Wearing the Same Dress was written back when the Oscar-winning American Beauty screenwriter was a starving New York playwright.

The dresses, in their floofy pink hideousity, aptly represent the garments contemporary women end up wearing, like it or not. Weโ€™re thrust into roles that result in a plague of denial and self-destruction: AIDs, eating disorders, abortion, depression, sex, marriage and, finally, an emerging sisterhood.

โ€œThereโ€™s an art to wearing a gown,โ€ one woman says, attempting to โ€œfloatโ€ across the room. The women discuss having ribs removed and other โ€œNazi war experimentsโ€ performed for vanityโ€™s sake.

โ€œWe are just as barbaric as those Aztec guys who used to play soccer with heads.”

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