Theater Review: Mercury at SLAC · The ghosts of the fights of relationships past are waiting to haunt you · Salt Lake Magazine | Jeremy Pugh | October 16, 2017 There are many plays out there that fall into a category that I like to call: “Alvy Singer rewrites his relationship history with Annie Hall.” Mercury, onstage now at Salt Lake Acting Company, falls into this category, only with more blood and a disemboweled bear. I’m talking here about the propensity of playwrights to fill their work with what always seems to me like the ghosts of arguments they’ve had in past relationships. They want to rewrite the fight to say all the things they should have said. Woody Allen’s character, Alvy Singer, in Annie Hall, is workshopping such a play at the end of the film and that’s where my mind goes whenever I see a piece that swims through these particular waters. And here we have Mercury the tale of two such revisionist couple fights. The first is between a pair of idle housewives who have been conducting an affair together under the noses of their absent husbands. Heather (Brighton Hertford) ends the liaison and her erstwhile lover Pamela (Dee-Dee Darby-Duffin) doesn’t want it to end. Elsewhere, another couple argues about the choice to move out of Portland to be closer to Nick’s (Mike Huftalin) ailing mother. Nick’s partner Brian (Tito Livas), isn’t happy with the move. Meanwhile the neighbor lady downstairs, Olive (April Fossen), doesn’t care to much for the codependent arguments coming from upstairs. And … FIGHT! Somewhere among the way, we meet Alicia (Lily Hye Soo Dixon) an eye-rolling curiosity shop owner who sells occult items that can be used to send people to hell, which is where playwright Steve Yokey is certainly going after drafting such a devilishly insidious play. (Sorry, I let the cheesy critic out for a minute and that sentence just had to be written.) I’ll leave the plot recap unfinished but do keep an eye out for the disemboweled bear. The battles among the couples, which includes Alicia and her boyfriend “SAM” (Aaron Adams) are the meat (excepting the bear thing) of this play and they unfold out like Yokey is channeling one of Dan Savage’s advice columns. And certainly each of these people could qualify for a DTMFA ruling at some point. We watch these three couples at their worst, their bloody worst. My favorite bit was Alicia’s argument with “SAM” in which she parrots some past couples-therapy session advice to win the day (with a demon of the underworld). The whole cast is awesome as is the staging, a clever lazy Susan turned by a toiling Alicia for every scene change. Mercury is a master class on winning a fight with your significant other. It’s funny as f***, dark and super bloody. And at some point there’s that dead bear. Skip the Nightmare on 13th and head over to SLAC where the ghosts of the fights of relationships past are waiting to haunt you. Boo! Mercury runs through Nov. 17 at Salt Lake Acting Company on the Main Theater Stage. Tickets and info here.