Caroline Neff, a native Texan, first came to Chicago in 2004 to study acting at Columbia College. After graduation, she became one of the city’s most intense and respected actors, serving as a busy ensemble member at Chicago’s acclaimed Steep Theatre and appearing in shows at theater companies like Victory Gardens, Griffin, Northlight and Jackalope. In 2010, Neff became an ensemble member with the Steppenwolf Theatre Company, where she worked on such productions as “Airline Highway” and “The Minutes,” both of which transferred to Broadway.
On Saturday, Neff opens at Steppenwolf in an iconic and very on-brand role: as May in Sam Shepard’s intense 1983 drama of warring lovers in the Mojave Desert, “Fool for Love.” She plays opposite Nick Gehlfuss (known for TV work including “Chicago Med”) as Eddie. Steppenwolf previously staged the play in 1984 with Terry Kinney directing Rondi Reed and William Petersen in the leading roles. May is now widely associated with the actress Kim Basinger, who appeared in the 1985 film version.
Neff, who moved to New York in 2020 after 15 years of living and working in Chicago, spoke during a break in rehearsals; our conversation has been edited for clarity and length.
Q: It’s been a while since I saw you on stage after seeing you so often for so many years.
A: 2024 was a very bleak year.
Q: But now here we are. An iconic role.
A: Here we are. I love our board of directors, I say that unironically, but their memories are way too good. After I was cast, I got two text messages saying they’ll never forget Rondi’s performance in this role in 1984. Cool! This will be different! That cannot be replicated! This is the first Sam Shepard play I have ever done. Maybe even the first in the American canon, given that I have done so much new work and British work.
Q: You must have read the play in college.
A: I don’t think I’ve picked up the play since then. And the difference between reading the play and feeling those characters at 20, versus now doing it at 39? The risks are so much bigger for these two people. And the reward is much more necessary. It makes me nervous. This conversation is going to make me cry.
When I read the play in college, my inroads to the irrational emotional choices these character made were much clearer because I don’t think I was using a lot of logic at that time in my life. But now as a person who really thinks about the impact of the choices that I make, how that impacts other people, my partner, my community, my self, my sweet, sweet underpaid therapist, it’s much more complex. I have the question “why?” a lot more frequently now than when I experienced a lot of Shepard’s work when I was younger. His characters are driven by their needs; they’re not driven by rational thinking.
I believe the biggest gift we have as actors is to rationalize the emotional choices people make. Including ourselves. So to strip away all of that stuff and just do, takes a lot of unlearning. We talk a lot in rehearsal about how the way we talk about mental health now is really different. And we can’t approach these characters like they had kind of access to mental health treatment in any way. It’s both fun and scary to play a character driven by her base impulses.
Q: Do you think this is still a shocking play?
A: I think it is more shocking now because you have to accept that there were two people with knowledge who continued to act on their impulses. The idea of consent is so prominent now in how we talk about intimacy.
I believe there was more than one version of the play. We are working from several texts including Sam’s own text with lines added in the margins. We’re not speaking them but they are very informative.
Q: Your background must help with Shepard.
A: Yes. I was born in New Mexico. It’s like my siren song. The way my body feels there. Look at Georgia O’Keeffe’s paintings. When she painted New York, it was like she was observing it. When she painted New Mexico, it was like an extension of her arm. I’m like that. I’m so at home in this play.
Unfortunately. People will say to me, “you’re great for this role and I will say, what exactly do you mean by that?”
Q: Perhaps that you are right for a play about wide-open American spaces?
There’s danger in the desert and it’s not like anywhere else. It’s built of survivors. The plants, the insects and the human beings that live there must be survivors. It’s baked into your bones.
You know, I’m always surprised it’s only 40 pages long. It says it should be performed relentlessly. Without a break. If these characters were thinking, they would not be doing what they are doing.
Through March 23 at Steppenwolf Theatre, 1650 N. Halsted St.; 312-335-1650 and www.steppenwolf.org
Chris Jones is a Tribune critic.
cjones5@chicagotribune.com