Center
Stage with
THEATRE REVIEW
“Bed and Sofa” – Cygnet Theatre
AIRDATE:
MAY 8, 2009
It’s
a good old-fashioned ménage à trois, with two in the
bed and the third consigned to the sofa. There’s plenty of singing about who
sleeps where. “Bed and Sofa” is not only a repeated musical refrain, it’s the
title of a quirky 1996 “silent movie musical,” based on a controversial 1927
Russian film that raised hackles in Soviet society and was banned in
Set in
What triggers her
mini-breakout is Kolya running into an old war buddy,
new to town, who can’t find lodging because of the severe housing shortage. Kolya open-heartedly invites Volodya
home with him, to stay on the sofa. Ludmilla is not
amused. But then Kolya is called away on an extended
construction project, and Volodya moves from sofa to
bed. When he returns, the cuckolded Kolya is furious,
and storms out. But he has nowhere to go, no place to stay. So he returns to
the sofa. The men play out their rivalry in a never-ending checkers
competition, which leaves poor Ludmilla ignored by two
demanding and demeaning men. How things turn out for all of them, and who gets
which sleeping accommodation, you’ll have to see the show to find out. What’s
fascinating is that there isn’t a word of dialogue; some of the action is
gestured and mimed like its silent movie source, and the rest is sung, to the
sardonic-operatic score of composer Polly Pen and lyricist Laurence Klavan.
Cygnet Theatre mounted a
stunning production of “Bed and Sofa” in 2004, and they’ve done it again. The
set, costumes, props, everything is in shades of black, white and gray, to
mimic the film and the bleakness of the times. The three-person cast and trio
of musicians are superb. The voices swoop and soar, and there’s the extra bonus
that the married couple onstage are real-life husband and wife offstage. Lance
Arthur Smith and Colleen Kollar Smith both possess
marvelous vocal instruments, as does Jordan Miller as the interloper. It’s
great fun on a series of serious subjects, and
The Cygnet Theatre production of “Bed and Sofa” runs through May 31 at
the Old Town Theatre.
©2009 PAT LAUNER