“Where do they get these people?” 
That’s what a lot of people wonder when watching reality TV. Is there some poor 
bastard whose job it is to troll through society in search of photogenic idiots 
to appear on these shows? Well, Suzanne 
Bachner’s new comedy Flirting With 
Reality offers a peek inside the audition process behind the reality 
phenomenon. 
Flirting with Reality is a clever two-person comedy about a casting 
agent and her assistant who are tasked with recruiting people to appear on a 
reality dating show called The Love Limo. We never actually see footage 
of The Love Limo, but there’s enough exposition to let the audience know 
that it’s a lot like MTV’s Next, or Blind Date, or Hunks, 
or the horde of other shows where drunken loudmouth idiots are crammed together 
to compete in mating rituals. Flirting… is less concerned with the on-air 
shenanigans than it is with how those shenanigans are 
contrived.
In Flirting… Felicia Scarangello plays Claudia, a 
bitchy casting agent, while Alexander R. 
Warner plays her new cameraman Jay, who’s actually an aspiring documentary 
filmmaker. The two are out to find the right mix of societal archetypes who’ll 
be guaranteed to conflict with each other, given the 
opportunity.
Even though these two characters are 
fun to watch, the real pleasure of this show is watching the cast play the 
four-dozen other characters who are auditioning for The Love Limo. That’s 
right, a whopping 20-something roles for each actor. Scarangello excelled at the 
many drunken floozies she played and Warner stood out as a creepy stalker, 
looking for his next obsession, and also when playing an insecure girl too. 
Minskoff's direction eased the 
audience into the notion of Scarangello and Warner’s playing all these different 
roles; the first couple of times they changed character, they made a quick 
costume change, but eventually the two were popping in and out of zany 
characters on the fly, and it was completely believable.
Kimo DeSean’s set wasn’t elaborate, but it was a spot-on 
recreation of a studio where such an audition might be held, complete with a 
backdrop with a cheesy-looking logo for The Love Limo show (Love Limo 
logo credited to John 
Chidiac).
Despite the fact that it’s a comedy, 
the play does get a bit serious at times, and makes some points about the 
conflicts in the entertainment industry between those trying to make art, and 
those who are trying to make a bunch of money (and how the two goals aren’t 
always mutually exclusive). There are several turnabouts in the final moments of 
the show, which seem thrown in just for the sake of having some sort of twist. 
They don’t do a whole lot for the story, and the show is just great even when 
taken on its most superficial level, without any deep insights into the secret 
goals of its characters.
Given the exceptional performances, 
and genuinely funny script, Flirting With 
Reality is a great choice for a bit of funny business, especially for those 
who hate reality TV.
Writing: 2
Directing: 1
Acting: 2
Set: 2
Costumes: 
1
Lighting/Sound: 1
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Copyright 2005 Charles Battersby