THEATRE
REVIEW:
“THE
FLYING DOCTOR” and “THE SCHOOL FOR HUSBANDS” at the Old Globe Theatre
KPBS
AIRDATE:
Here
comes a little acoustic quiz. Ready? See if you can identify this sound. (CLACKER
SOUND) Give up? It's a slapstick. The real source of the term, two flat pieces of wood that make a
loud slapping sound when they're hit against something, usually another
person. Originated in the 16th Century,
in the comic, improvisational Italian theater called "commedia
dell'arte.''
And,
in at least one of the two Molière plays currently at the Old Globe Theatre,
the slapstick takes -- and gives -- a beating.
In "The Flying Doctor," the slapstick is used to hit and
pummel, it doubles as a gun, simulates an erection and elicits all kinds of
laughter from the audience. Well, this
is early Molière, which borrowed heavily from commedia dell'arte. So, along with the slapstick, you can throw
in other such high-brow activities as belching, passing wind and drinking
urine. My heavens, at the Old
Globe? And so soon after the clean-cut
Plaid madness? Sure, this is comedy in
its coarsest form, commedia and all its fun and foibles.
Director
Edward Payson Call invokes the traditional commedia masks, moves and stock
characters for this frothy curtain-raiser.
It's a quick 30 minutes, though the pace could be even crisper.
The plot is goofy, but it foreshadows much of
Molière’s later, more mature works.
There's a lovesick girl, a crafty servant, and a bright young woman who
hatches the idea for the servant to impersonate a doctor for the sake of the
young lovers.
Everything
is going according to plan, until the servant is discovered without his medical
disguise. Then, he's forced to invent a
twin brother for the doctor. And the
rest of the time, he literally flies in and out of a window, up and down from
the ground to the second story, trying to be two people in two places at one
moment. Tom Harrison is an agile,
athletic actor, who pulls off all the ruses with aplomb. To see him battle himself, slap-stick
himself and show both brothers together at the same time is nothing short of
hilarious.
Harrison, like most of the cast, also plays a
character in "The School for Husbands," a slightly later, more
sophisticated, but still lesser-known Molière play that slips seamlessly into
action after the first piece, with no intermission. Here, we have a somewhat preachy play about How to handle a
Woman, or the punishments and rewards of restrictive versus permissive
parenting. And guess who comes up with
the scheme for uniting another pair of young lovers? Another feisty young woman.
Though these plays differ enormously in style,
they do so less in substance and content.
And both translations are delightful, both done by Molière masters. "The Flying Doctor" is in not-so-prosaic
prose. And this is a world premiere
poetic translation of "The School for Husbands" -- very clever, and
eminently understandable.
The "Husbands" are put in a fairy
tale setting of gingerbread houses and elaborate costumes. And there's a neat juxtaposition of USD
students and veteran actors. A nice
little intro to Molière -- and the original slapstick. Nothing deep and ponderous, but an evening
that's light, fluffy, fun -- and filled with slapstick (SOUND OF SLAPSTICK)
Hah- Gotcha!
I'm Pat Launer, for KPBS radio.
©1992 Patté Productions Inc.