A confounding story of American opportunity

In ACT's new play, "Pilgrims Musa and Sheri in the New World," characters take hurtful actions without seeming to care, and yet everyone winds up happy. Hard to believe? Judge for yourself.

A confounding story of American opportunity
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by

Ashli Blow

In ACT's new play, "Pilgrims Musa and Sheri in the New World," characters take hurtful actions without seeming to care, and yet everyone winds up happy. Hard to believe? Judge for yourself.

There’s one moment in Pilgrims  Musa and Sheri in the New World that almost every American of immigrant  stock can relate to. It’s when Musa, a soft-spoken, Egyptian-born New  York cabbie, explains to his Egyptian-American fiancé why he wants  to leave the ways of the old country behind. It’s a poignant scene  and one that has been repeated millions of times since the founding  of the U.S.

Unfortunately, this is the only place  in the play that Musa is believable as a real human being. The rest  of the time, both he and the other main character, his slutty American  girlfriend Sheri, seem like cardboard figures, designed to represent  “types” rather than actual people. This is largely the fault of  playwright Yussef El Guindi, who has created personalities and reactions  that simply don’t make sense in the situation at the core of the play.

The story is straightforward. Musa  meets Sheri, a waitress at a local coffee shop, and brings her home  one evening. Sheri, a potty-mouth who by her own admission sleeps around  (“In about five minutes, I’m going to be a cinch to bag”), comes  on to Musa almost immediately, and not surprisingly they wind up in  bed.

From here, though, the script veers off into territory that is  simply not believable. Musa falls in love with Sheri, whose nonstop  stream of curse words soon becomes tiresome at best, offensive at worst.  Even if there were a strong physical attraction between them — which  actors Shanga Parker as Musa and Carol Roscoe as Sheri fail to communicate  — it’s hard to imagine that the quiet Musa would want to spend the  rest of his life with the hard-edged, culturally insensitive Sheri, who  at one point goes so far as to call Musa’s gentle, observant Muslim  fiancé a “bitch.”

There are other aspects of the characters and the story that are equally implausible. Though Musa deceives both  Sheri and his fiancé, Gamila, he never fully acknowledges the hurt he  has caused both of them, instead explaining his behavior as a feeling  of the heart he cannot control. Remarkably, they both accept his explanation.  Gamila hears him out, then wishes him the best. After a brief explosion,  Sheri agrees to quit her job and take off with him on an open-ended  road trip to discover America, and the play ends on an upbeat, hopeful  note in which everyone gets what they want, and need.

Adding to the problems are appearances  by two extraneous characters, the ghost of Musa’s roommate, Abdallah,  and Musa’s Somali friend Tayyib. Both serve to extol the benefits  of life in America, a function that is hardly necessary. Everyone living  in the U.S. — or anywhere in the world, for that matter — knows the  promise of America even if life here is not always what newcomers expect.  But there’s no room for that kind of reality in Pilgrims Musa and  Sheri in the New World. El Guindi’s America is one of endless opportunity  in which hurtful actions are undertaken with impunity and everyone winds  up happy.

Although many of the problems with  the play can be attributed to El Guindi’s script, there are acting  and staging issues as well. Roscoe as Sheri does the best she can with  one of the most disagreeable characters ever to grace the stage, but  Shanga Parker completely disappears into the role of Musa — and not in  a good way. Parker’s Musa is devoid of passion, even in the early  stages of his infatuation with Sheri, and Parker lacks the skill to  convey the range of feelings anyone in his situation could reasonably  be expected to have. Kimberley Sustad is equally weak as Gamila, and  even if El Guindi has not written much vitriol into her words, a more  adept actor could create nuances to convey a depth of feeling that Sustad’s  Gamila lacks. Although staging in the round presents major challenges,  director Anita Montgomery does so less ably than many other ACT directors,  making it necessary to strain to hear significant amounts of dialogue.

It’s always disappointing to see  a new play fail. There may be the core of an idea worth pursuing here,  but El Guindi would be well advised to rework Pilgrims Musa and Sheri  in the New World — especially softening the character of Sheri  — before shopping it to other theater companies.

If you go: Pilgrims Musa and Sheri in the New World, Tuesdays-Sundays through July 17 at ACT Theatre, 700 Union  St., Seattle. Tickets start at $37.50 ($15 students; $20 under 25) and are available at the box office, by phone (206-292-7676), or online.

Ashli Blow

By Ashli Blow

Ashli Blow is a Seattle-based freelance writer who talks with people — in places from urban watersheds to remote wildernesses — about the environment around them. She’s been working in journal