The production, a one act play, revolves around two troubled characters, Danny and Roberta, who meet and strike up a conversation in a bar. John Turturro and June Stein originated the roles in 1983. Since its original production premiered Off-Broadway at the Circle in the Square Theatre it was revived in 2004 and was staged again in 2023, directed by Jeff Ward.
Summary
Set in the Bronx, the story revolves around Danny and Roberta who strike up a conversation in a bar.
"He is a brooding, self-loathing young man who resorts more to violence than reason; she is a divorced, guilt-ridden young woman whose troubled teenage son is now being cared for by her parents. Danny, whose fellow truck drivers call him “the animal,” seems incapable of tender emotion, while Roberta, who is still haunted by the memory of an ugly sexual incident involving her father, is distrustful of men in general."[1]
Mel Gussow of The New York Times declared, "Performed without intermission, it is too long (85 minutes) to be approached as a vignette, and it is too dramatically underdeveloped to be regarded as a full-length double portrait...the play is the equivalent of sitting at ringside watching a prize fight that concludes in a loving embrace".[5]
For the 2004 revival, David Rooney of Variety wrote, "A dark and dirty riposte to meet-cute Hollywood romances about lovable losers finding each other . . . the play traces the to-and-fro swing of the pendulum between the characters as hope and the possibility of love materialize before them, first as drunken make-believe and later as something frightening but real. Subtitled “An Apache Dance,” it unfolds like a pained pas de deux, its deliberate rhythms precisely choreographed".[6]