THEATRE REVIEW:
“THE LADY CRIES MURDER” at
the RUSE (Marquis Public Theatre)
KPBS AIRDATE: ???
Welcome to Simile Land. That's the place where writer Raymond
Chandler sort of lived, when he wasn't in La Jolla, where he spent his last 13
years. His purple prose and
hard-boiled plots have enchanted certain readers and moviegoers for years. Why, friends of the La Jolla Library just
finished their third International Imitation Raymond Chandler Writing Contest.
Now along comes playwright John William
See, with "The Lady Cries Murder," currently performed by the Naked
Theatre Club at the Marquis Public Theatre.
Holy plot contrivance, Batman.
Holy Chandler imitation. Holy
smoke machine. This is a mishmash of a
production if I ever saw one.
The first problem is the play. Not only the language is overdone. There's absolutely no hint of subtlety here,
and no cleverness in the twists of plot and twisted characters. There are zillions of little references and
reminiscences to Chandler and his pulp detective confreres, but so what? Is the intention a few in-jokes? Is there a story worth telling here? Does anybody REALLY know what time it
is?? In the end, we don't really care
whodunit or why.
See, there's rich writer Charles Sartone,
who's really big thug Jasper Grunt, who also appears as a character in
Sartone's we're-watching-it-being-written radio play, "The Lady Cries
Murder."
Raymond Chandler also appears in the radio
play, complaining that the whole plot is a rip-off of his work. When Chandler is hit with his own brand of
convoluted prose, he doesn't even understand it. He's also accused of stealing from Dashiell Hammett and Earle
Stanley Gardner, producing writing that's "elaborate, messy and absolutely
devoid of humor." Chandler pouts
and grouses: "Why don't people see
the strong element of burlesque in my writing?" Now that's kinda funny.
But you don't need two hours for two good lines.
The problem is that neither playwright See
nor director Christopher R had a clear vision of what they wanted to do or
where they wanted it to go with it. So
everything's all over the place.
Literally speaking, the scene keeps changing from New York to San
Francisco to L.A. to Katmandu.
The Gumshoe Philip Diamond, accused of
undergoing a second nervous breakdown, can't seem to keep track of where he is
or who he's bedding down with. There's
Marsha Shorthand, who's really Vivian Reagan, and there's Shanghai Sue, who has
a silly Chinese accent but is played by a black actress. She sounds like a tongue-tied Barbara
Walters, talking about a "jerous boyfriend" and a "good-rookin'
detective." It's all too silly --
and not silly enough.
You have several choices when doing spoofs and knock-offs. Play them very small or very large. Christopher R can't decide which way to
go. So there's both under- and
over-acting, deadpan and campiness, and the whole just doesn't fit together.
The performances themselves are spotty as
well. Mark Taylor is sometimes
endearing, sometimes annoying as gumshoe Diamond. Ed Budzyna's Chandler and Allen Bernstein's various characters
are basically character-less. Jeff
Jones, Darren Press and Ski Mark Ford play their roles broadly, aiming for a
laugh, which is okay but sometimes intrusive, and it makes them stand out far
too much from the other ten actors. As
for the women, Robin Eisen is weak but pretty, Dochia Knox is mis-cast, and
Jill Drexler and Laurie Lehmann-Grey are fine.
The best job is done by Evergreen
Nurseries, which makes Ski Mark Ford's wonderfully multi-leveled set come alive
with plants. The lighting and sound
follow the Three Bears Approach of the rest of the production: sometimes too much, sometimes too little,
and occasionally, just right.
A play and a production need not have a
moral, but they ought to have a point.
I'm Pat Launer,
for KPBS radio.
©1991 Patté Productions Inc.