THEATRE REVIEWS:
“PICASSO AT THE LAPIN AGILE”
at the San Diego Repertory Theatre
and
“STRANGE BEDFELLOWS” at the
Fritz Theater
KPBS AIRDATE: MAY 17, 1999
How much politics and philosophy do you like
stirred into your comedy? If you prefer
your humor straight up, without a twist… curl up with a frozen sitcom. But if you like to be shaken -- and stirred
-- imbibe this: the San Diego Rep’s “Picasso at the Lapin Agile” and “Strange
Bedfellows” at the Fritz. Either one
could leave you tipsy.
Steve Martin, that wild
and crazy guy formerly known as the idiot with the arrow through his head, made
his playwriting debut in 1993 by dreaming up a fantasy meeting between two genuinely
wild and crazy guys: Pablo Picasso and
Albert Einstein. He set what he called his “serious comedy” in a small,
bohemian bistro, the Lapin Agile (translation: nimble rabbit), which was, in
fact, frequented by Picasso. When the play premiered Off Broadway, it won the
New York Outer Critics Circle Awards for Best Play and Best Playwright.
The
clever, often provocative piece is set in 1904, one year before the publication
of Einstein’s “Theory of Relativity” and three years before Picasso’s
groundbreaking “Les Demoiselles d’Avignon.”
These two 20-something wunderkinder, full of promise, ideas and
themselves, meet to boast, compare creativity and compete for the Most
Influential Award. Big Issues butt up against one-liners, as Martin combines
art and physics with generous doses of verbal and physical humor. He seems to be a little frightened of heavy
discourse; just as he gets to a really core issue, he bobs and weaves and
lapses into hopeless silliness. But
what can we expect? This isn’t Chekhov;
it’s Steve Martin, for God’s sake.
He’s
takes a sweeping, if not a deep, look at the 20th century, making some timeless
observations about men, women, and the most critical contributions to 20th
century society. Ultimately, the play poses the intriguing question: Which domain will have had the greatest
effect on our lives over the course of this mend-bending 100 years? Art? Science? Commerce? Or celebrity?
Martin
does great with the first three, in the fascinating characters of the
womanizing braggadocio Picasso, the bumbling professor Einstein, and the
whimsically imagined Schmendiman, self-promoting inventor extraordinaire. But then, he throws in a less-than-amusing
red herring, a time-traveling mystery guest.
Convention dictates that I not ruin the surprise, but it sure doesn’t
work for me – neither on the page, nor here onstage… where the portrayal is a
great deal less than stellar, all the spotlight and starlight having been
stolen by Picasso, in Mikael Salazar’s irresistibly seductive performance. As Picasso’s creative counterpart, Ron
Campbell makes for a hilarious, though nearly buffoonish Einstein, with his
stand-up hair and impeccably absent-minded physical comedy.
Joan
Schirle, director of the Dell’Arte School of Physical Theatre, has cast with
confidence and underscored all the pratfalls and wordplay the script demands.
Especially effective are Jonathan McMurtry as a jaded roué with a weak bladder,
Deborah van Valkenburgh as a worldly-wise wench, and Michael Douglas Hummel as
the ebullient, self-aggrandizer Schmendiman. The set looks more garish than
bohemian, but the costumes are priceless.
The play itself is flawed, and the production isn’t flawless either, but
both are damn good. You gotta love a
comedy that mixes the high-minded with the low-brow, in what the director calls
a ‘vaudeville of the mind.’ As the character Gaston puts it, ‘You take a couple
of geniuses, put them in a room together, & wow.’
Now, if you like a play
of ideas, hop on over to the Fritz, which has hatched a humorous, well-wrought
production of three comical-political mini-plays by local actor/writer/director
Tim West, who, in the vein of Steve Martin, is ignited by the ironic ‘What
if’? What if FDR could walk? What if the Republicans chose their
presidential candidate in a game of back-room charades? And what if the intelligence
community… isn’t? Director Chris Wylie
and his funny-bunny cast have all the skill, speed and agility of… a nimble
rabbit.
©1999 Patté Productions Inc.