If you were a child in the โ90s who wore a bonnet for fun, there may be no phrase in the English language more mordantly comforting than: โYou have died of dysentery.โ
Between the Laura Ingalls Wilder books, pioneer American Girl dolls with tragic backstories, and the alluded to computer game (released on floppy disks for Microsoft DOS in 1992), I was one of those strange eight-year-olds. So when I found out that Portland Center Stage was producing Bekah Brunstetterโs The Oregon Trail, a play about a grown-up โ90s kid rediscovering the joys of traveling the trail, I was sold.
Until I actually saw it.
Brunstetterโs play centers on Jane (Sarah Baskin), an unemployed 25-year-old crashing on her sisterโs couch, who plays The Oregon Trail in between avoiding the job search, drinking heavily, and sleeping with inappropriate men. Sheโs a mess, basically, and probably clinically depressed, although the play kind of dances around this fact.
Thatโs too bad, because one of Brunstetterโs strengths is her choice to embed sad adult themes within the confines of a beloved childrenโs computer game. And for a play thatโs ostensibly about depression and many forms of survival glimpsed through a deceptively whimsical lens, The Oregon Trail is disappointingly lightweight. The playโs sentimental, tacked-on ending passes off Janeโs depression not as
depression at all, but as superficial, early-twenties existential ennui. But thereโs a difference between feeling sad and not being able to get out of bed or hold down a job, and itโs annoying to see debilitating depression depicted as something that a little bootstraps ingenuity can solve. I was nearly as irritated by Brunstetterโs dialogue, which can be obnoxiously cute: At times, it sounds more like the idea of how millennials talk than how millennials actually talk.
If you loved The Oregon Trail, thereโs probably enough here to keep you entertained. The soothing MS-DOS interface the play opens with (Leif Norbyโs wonderfully charming voice-over listing Janeโs options as the game itself), Emily Yetter as Janeโs more well-adjusted sister, and the comfortingly low-tech logo of the MECC educational computer software company written large above the stage. There are some creatively employed songs from the late โ90s and early โ00s (although I canโt say I was psyched to hear Bushโs โGlycerineโ almost in its entirety).
But itโs hard to argue that it wouldnโt be more fun to just play The Oregon Trail, which you can now do online, for freeโa fact written into the script of this Oregon Trail, just in case you didnโt already know.
(I did.)
