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DocuSign Envelope ID: F859AB28-066D-45E9-BB24-D873BDC015A0 <br /> A strong season opener in A Kid Like Jake <br /> By Byron Woods <br /> Photo by Jonathan Young <br /> (L-R)Jim Moscater, Meredith Sause and Rasool Jahan in A KID LIKE JAKE <br /> A K1D: Jkt JAKE <br /> Deep Disi1 Theater.::; . <br /> Through Sept 20 `: <br /> n a sane world, Daniel Pearle's drama A KID LIKE JAKE, the incandescent season opener at Deep Dish Theater, <br /> would be considered an out-and-out farce. It chronicles a professional couple's marriage as it's stretched to the <br /> breaking point by the process of assembling their only child's applications—not to college, but kindergarten, in a <br /> series of upscale private schools around New York. <br /> As a result, the title character's behavior is closely parsed by parents Alex and Greg (Meredith Sause and Jim <br /> Moscater), pre-school administrator Judy(Rasool Jahan)and the nonfictional Educational Records Bureau, creators <br /> of the Admission Assessment for Beginning Learners, a standardized test that measures"verbal and quantitative <br /> reasoning, early literacy, and mathematics skills"—in pre-kindergarten children. <br /> When the search for a vaunted competitive edge begins at 4, Jake's current age, the parents find themselves judged <br /> as closely as the child. They're the ones who have to fill out entrance essays assessing things like their"educational <br /> values."Alex is stressing over one as the play opens. <br /> Under Tony Lea's direction, Sause is at the top of her game as the tightly-wound Alex. As she veers between over- <br /> analysis and denial, Alex's obsessive concern about Jake's future begins to make us wonder about the child's past. <br /> Though a bit more low-key at the start, Moscater's Greg ultimately finds the dark side in this relationship. <br /> Jahan delivers the crisp, professional performance we expect as no-nonsense administrator Judy, and Jess Jones <br /> strongly serves in two supporting roles. <br /> I'd like to say such madness is limited to terminal overachievers in major cities. But given assaults on public education <br /> in North Carolina such as the one reported in last week's INDY, there are probably going to be a lot more kids like <br /> Jake--and parents like these—in the future. More's the pity. <br /> This article appeared in print with the headline "The overachievers." <br />