Frank South's
Pay Attention: ADHD in Hollywood,
On the Rocks with a Twist
A hypomanic, alcoholic, one-man show with ADHD.

Thanks to L.A. for a great run.
Pay Attention opens in New York City Spring 2010


BACK STAGE


Pay Attention: ADHD in
Hollywood, on the
Rocks with a Twist

Reviewed by Paul Birchall
May 20, 2009

PHOTO CREDIT
Ed Krieger


Playwright Frank South's engrossing autobiographical solo show explores that unexpectedly shifting border that lies between the twin no man's lands of genius and madness. South has been challenged his entire life with the condition we today call attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, a state defined by a frequent inability to focus, hyperactivity, and impulsiveness.

And yet South's play, which sometimes appears to owe a debt of stylistic discursive gratitude to Spalding Gray, turns out to be quite different from a standard sob story "drama of affliction." It's also a Hollywood tragedy and a story of overcoming addiction, as much as it is a portrait of life with ADHD.

By any standard, his ADHD notwithstanding, South has had extraordinary success. An early writing protégé of filmmaker Robert Altman, South was also an executive producer and showrunner for the series Melrose Place, a gig he enjoyed for several years. During his life's ups and downs, South is haunted by a little imaginary demon, whom we at first assume is the embodiment of his ADHD. Only gradually do we come to realize that the demon stalking him is that voice of self-destructiveness that speaks to almost all of us.

South's narrative trajectory drifts through time, frequently echoing the disjointed thought processes of someone with ADHD. Although the piece could stand cutting, and some of South's digressions play as a prosaic laundry list chronology, director Mark Travis' deceptively unobtrusive staging crafts an intimacy that gradually leaves us feeling we know the star personally. As an actor, South's sometimes-halting line readings and stammering delivery are at first hard to penetrate; but, with his jowelly hangdog face and mildly Mephistophelean grin, he's immediately likable, and the absolute authenticity and immediacy of the performance are striking.

http://www.backstage.com/bso/reviews-la-theatre/pay-attention-adhd-in-hollywood-on-the-rocks-1003975002.story


Questions? Comments? - email Frank at franksouth@franksouth.net

Keep up with Frank's ADHD family adventures at his blog -

"Better Late Than Never - ADHD Dad, ADHD Kids, Showbiz"

on
www.additudemag.com