THEATRE
REVIEW:
“THE
DRESSER” at the
KPBS AIRDATE:
For no apparent reason, there are eight actors
in "The Dresser," a comic drama by British playwright Ronald
Harwood. It's really a two-person
piece. There's the title character,
We are backstage in January, 1942; the shopworn
company is playing an English provincial town, with air-raids shrieking in the
night. "King Lear" is on the
boards, the 227th performance on the road.
But Sir is nowhere to be found.
Aging, anguished and exhausted, he has collapsed on the street in a
physical-mental breakdown. He releases
himself from the hospital, and stumbles back to the theater, so
A forgettable stream of company players and a
patiently loving stage manager waft in and out. There's one pathetic sexual moment with Sir and a young starlet,
and one scathing scene between Sir and Her Ladyship, his long-suffering wife. But mostly, it's Sir in decline and Norman
mincing and prancing about. A fading
geezer and a fawning sycophant. After a
triumphant final curtain, Sir leaves little behind, least of all gratitude to
the dresser who has selflessly, adoringly served him for sixteen years.
This is a scorching portrait of backstage
badinage. But also a powerful statement
on relationships in general. On those
in the spotlight and those in the wings.
On those who act well in the theater of life, and those who play small
parts in petty ways.
The Coronado Playhouse production of "The
Dresser" looks great, but it doesn't feel right. All the minor characters -- and actors --
fade into the shadows. And center
stage, Thom Rhodes never quite draws us in as Sir. He's not believably once-great or senescent. His voice and frame are big, but his
emotional range is small and his face displays a limited spectrum of
expressions.
In the equally challenging role of
Directors J. Sherwood Montgomery and Leon Natker
have worked well together for years.
But they haven't hit emotional paydirt here. They've captured the language of the piece, and
I'm Pat Launer, for KPBS radio.
©1992 Patté Productions Inc.