A Riveting ‘Job’ Reveals the Dangers of Our Digital Age at Signature Theatre

ARLINGTON, VA-At first glance, Jane (Jordan Slattery) presents as a young woman in the throes of a nervous breakdown. When this hyper-intense psychological thriller opens, she is aiming a revolver at Loyd (Eric Hissom), a therapist whom her tech company has mandated she see before being approved to return to work. “I’m not afraid of you,” he tells her. “Maybe you should be,” she replies. Jane is bright, articulate, sensitive, and coming off a failed romance. Suddenly, she turns the gun on herself.
Loyd eventually settles her down in his cozy San Francisco office. Ultimately, Loyd convinces Jane to reveal her innermost feelings. As she begins to open up to him, she pulls out her cell phone and shows him a viral video taken by a co-worker filmed in the heat of her workplace freakout. During their session we learn her family is well educated – her father an artist, her mother a professor who both ignore her. “In the real world nobody has time for me,” she tells him. She seems dissociative and out of control. This is no ordinary freak out. Jane’s facial features contort each time she loses her grip on reality. As she spirals downward the lights on the set, and in the theater itself, flicker, crackle and fail before coming back on to reveal a fresh scenario.
Jane has a dystopian view of the world. She frowns on capitalism and believes the rich make all the rules. But as their convo progresses, you’ll wonder if it isn’t Gen Z who are setting the rules. And though Jane claims a lot of her personal satisfaction comes from social media, she admits it causes her paranoia.
In this two-hander, the dialogue is micro-focused on each characters’ fears. Loyd’s, that she will kill him, and Jane’s, that she will. We learn this because Jane probes Loyd with personal questions about his family life. When Loyd learns her job as a social media content monitor flagging videos that reveal the depths of the world’s depravity, her psychosis begins to come into focus.

As a fan of true crime in all its peculiarities, I found the twists and turns riveting. Brilliantly directed by Matthew Gardiner, it is not for the fainthearted, but it is unforgettable and important. As playwright Friedlich posits, “What is the human cost of our internet?”
Recommended for its revelations into the psychological effects of our digital age in an ever-shifting landscape.
Scenic Design by Luciana Stecconi, Costume Design by Alexa Cassandra Duimstra, Lighting Design by Colin K. Bills, Sound Design by Kenny Neal.
JOB runs through March 16th at Signature Theatre, 4200 Campbell Avenue in Shirlington Village, Arlington, VA. For tickets and information call the box office at 703.820.9771 or visit www.SigTheatre.org.
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