THEATRE REVIEW:
“NOCTURNE” at New Village Arts
“NO WAY TO TREAT A LADY” at North Coast
Repertory Theatre
KPBS AIRDATE: May 12, 2006
A couple of killers – and
some killer performances. Murder is on the minds of local theatermakers –
in a melancholic monologue and a madcap musical comedy. “No Way to Treat a
Lady” is a tuneful adaptation of a funny 1968 film; the meditative “Nocturne”
was a recent nominee for the Pulitzer Prize.
Written by Adam Rapp in 2001, “Nocturne” is a
starkly beautiful, elegiac contemplation of loss and grief. Fifteen years ago,
the narrator tells us right out of the gate, he killed his sister. It was
inadvertent; he was 17 years old, driving home from his summer job. When the
brakes of his Buick Electra failed, his beloved 9 year-old sib was decapitated.
His mother spent the rest of her days in deep depression. His father pulled a
gun on him. And our “resilient narrator” ran off from that
deadly “blonde house” in Joliet,
IL. At the end of the
play, as his father is dying, he returns. And this mournful unraveling of
tragic events ends with a little flicker of light, a spark of hope,
reconciliation and redemption. Although
the precipitating event is harsh and brutal, the language of the play is
lyrical and poetic; the piece is still, muted, deliberate. Some of the seminal
scenes are subtly enacted upstage, in the strikingly spare New Village Arts
production, designed by Kristianne Kurner, directed by Joshua Everett Johnson.
In a precise, delicately calibrated performance, Francis Gercke nimbly
navigates the pain, anguish and lush, evocative language. Nothing very dramatic
happens, but this is marvelous, meticulous storytelling that engages the mind
and sometimes stops the heart.
Now, murder takes a decidedly different turn in
“No Way To Treat a Lady,” where a serial killer sings
and a Mama’s boy detective gets his man – and
his girl. The musical is a hoot, and it’s played to perfection at North Coast
Repertory Theatre, under the scrupulous and hilarious direction of Rick Simas. Based on the novel and film by William
Goldman, Douglas Cohen’s show focuses on an unemployed actor who’ll do anything
to get his name in the New York Times, to win approval from his deceased,
disdainful mother, once a celebrated actress. Killing a string of lonely women
does the trick, but he commits his homicides with care – and flair: wigs and
accents and costumes that are, well, to die for. Randall Dodge is uproarious in
the role, and he’s matched laugh for laugh by Susan Denaker, who plays all the
hapless victims, as well as both men’s carping mothers. As the budding lovers,
husband and wife Nick and Rebecca Spear are a delight – he’s
the zhlubby gumshoe and she’s the adorable ingénue. All sing wonderfully, under the lively musical
direction of Tim McKnight. Be forewarned: this show will knock you dead.
©2006 Patté Productions
Inc.