THEATRE REVIEW:
“SEE HOW THEY RUN” at the Lamb’s
Players Theatre & “ROUGH CROSSING” at the North Coast Repertory Theatre
& “SINCERITY FOREVER” at the Sledgehammer Theatre
KPBS AIRDATE: June 19, 1996
It must be
summer; comedies are sprouting up like weeds.
And the theater landscape is knee-deep in that raucous, rapid-fire,
blundering, dithering, slapstick horseplay called farce.
Lamb’s Players
Theatre is presenting Philip King’s 1947 mayhem, “See How They Run.” Up at North Coast Repertory Theatre, there’s
Tom Stoppard’s 1984 “Rough Crossing.”
They make for comical counterpoint.
One is better written, the other, better performed.
King’s farce is
a bit clumsy. The set-ups for
misconceptions and miscommunications are transparent and predictable. The text is not particularly arch or clever,
but the death of wit is compensated for by the physical pandemonium and
confused identities -- there are no fewer than five real and impostor clerics
onstage at one point.
Lamb’s Artistic
Director Robert Smyth has cast and directed cast impeccably. These are stock English characters: a stodgy
vicar; pompous bishop; tight-assed, gossipy matron, even a jocular American,
with a menacing Nazi thrown in.
The matron
winds up drunk, while the vicar runs around with his pants off, the pajamaed
bishop gets thrown in manure, and the clumsy maid juggles everyone, including
the golf-clubs, at once.
It’s frankly
hilarious at times, especially Myra McWethy’s corpulent, limp-limbed drunk
scene, Paul Maley’s flawless pratfall, and the winking, blinking,
elbow-nudging, not-so-subtle hint-giving of DeAnna Driscoll’s spunky, funny
maid and Cynthia Gerber’s quick-thinking vicar’s wife. Tim West is threateningly Aryan as the Nazi,
and Howard Bickle is as facile with comedy as drama.
If there are
only a couple of moments of tear-streaming laughter, even in the presence of a
totally brainless play, isn’t it worth it?
How often do you get to belly-laugh till you cry? Go “See How They Run,” and while you’re at
it, catch the Lamb’s at the Hahn doing a third return visit of the thoroughly
entertaining “Boomers.”
What may not, however,
be worth the trip, despite its celebrational setup, is “Rough Crossing” at
North Coast Rep. Not only is this a San
Diego premiere, it’s also the company’s 100th production, marking its fifteenth
anniversary. Now THAT is something to
crow about. But Tom Stoppard’s
generally unfunny, overblown, convoluted mishmash, is not. This is yet another comical insider’s view
of the theater, not one-tenth as humorous as Michael Frayn’s “Noises Off” or
even Terrence McNally’s “It’s Only a Play.”
The only redeeming
virtue is its word-play par excellence.
Stoppard specializes in little gems like “sine qua nonchalance” and
dialogue such as “I worked in Paris at the Georges...” “Cinq?”
“No, it’s a hotel.”
Ba-duh-bum. As one of the
writers in the show, a Stoppard alter-ego, aptly says about his latest work,
“it reads better than it plays.”
Clever quips
and puns are not enough to carry a wordy, convoluted play within a play, or a
one-note joke about a playwright not being able to get a drink served to him on
an ocean liner bound for New York, where he and his partner are scheduled to
open a messy, half-written musical. The
composer tries to jump overboard because his fiancée, the leading lady, has
slept with the much-older leading man.
Then there’s a tipsy waiter who can’t get his sea legs even before the
ship sets sail. In every prior
production of the play, the waiter has stolen the show. He’s got all the funny lines and slapshtick
stage business. But Don Loper, like the
rest of the cast, is trying so hard to be funny, he isn’t.
This is not
director Rosina Reynolds’ best work.
The casting is erratic, and the accents are as on-again, off-again as
the electricity in a summer brown-out.
But the celebrational season continues....
In a much
different comic vein (jugular, I
believe), Sledgehammer Theatre is commemorating a countywide milestone (or is
that millstone?): the Republican
National Convention, with two back-to-back skewerings of America by New York
playwright Mac Wellman. Up now is
“Sincerity Forever,” to be followed by a return engagement of the ever-popular,
difficult to announce, “Seven Blowjobs.”
If you like
your comedy laced with acidic social commentary, and you don’t mind foul or
deconstructed language, you’re gonna love them both. “Sincerity” shows us three white-sheeted couples in Klan hoods,
expounding on virtue, morality and everlasting sincerity, while admitting that
they don’t know anything, they don’t know why, and they don’t really care. Meanwhile, mystic furballs, who curse
everything around them, including each other, are insidiously taking over the
toxic-waste dump-site, Klan-town of Hillsbottom. Then Jesus H. Christ makes an appearance to set everyone
straight.
It’s well acted
by a tight ensemble, well directed by Val Day, well designed and well lit,
funny, and more than a little unnerving.
Nobody gives a hard left jab to the right like Wellman. This one’s a knockout.
I'm Pat Launer,
KPBS radio.
©1996 Patté Productions Inc.