A Christmas Panto at Centerstage
Published in The News Tribune, Dec. 2, 2016
The cast of Little Red Riding Hood with Red Riding Hood (Helen Martin), Dame Hood (Alan Bryce), and Robyn Hood (Taylor Davis), photo by Michelle Smith-Lewis |
Theater goers who have not yet
discovered the insanity of British-style pantos
should get to Centerstage Theatre in Federal Way to see Little Red Riding Hood.
A panto (short for pantomime but nothing like mime as we know it) is a traditional fairy tale
presented as rip-roaring musical filled with puns and bad jokes, cross-dressing
actors, and lots of audience participation. Children are encouraged to boo the
bad guy and cheer the good fairy and to shout out key phrases whenever certain
cues are given — and wow!, do they ever
respond with wild enthusiasm.
Yes, pantos
are for kids, but there are many jokes and double-entendres that only the
adults get, most of which are either risqué jokes or local references.
Red Riding Hood (Helen Martin) and Prince Brian (Zack Summers), photo by Michelle Smith-Lewis |
The panto has been a Centerstage holiday
tradition for 10 years now. The latest installment
is Little Red Riding Hood, which
features a good fairy called Fairy Dust (Trista Duval) in life-or death battle with the evil wizard,
Magithor (Olivia Lee). And of course, the traditional story of Little Red
Riding Hood (Helen Martin) and the Big Bad Wolf (Adam Minton). Only in this version, the wolf is no longer bad. He’s a vegan, and he’s nice to everybody until
Magithor puts a spell on him that turns him bad again.
Little
Red Riding Hood is
a lot of fun, but not quite as hilarious as some of the earlier pantos. Or perhaps I’ve simply become jaded
after seeing so many of them. Zack Summers as Prince Brian sings terrifically,
but his dancing and acting needs to be
more animated. The same can be said of Minton’s wolf, although his singing on
the bad wolf song with Magithor rocks,
and Lee belts out her part on this one with the kind of gusto a Tina Turner
could be proud of. Her performance as Magithor is captivating throughout. Also
captivating and as loveable as any character in the play is Red Riding Hood’s
brother Robyn (Taylor Davis).
Another panto tradition is to have a large man
in drag play a very amorous woman who usually picks out a man in the front row
to flirt with – so, gentlemen beware of front-row seats. In Little Red Riding Hood that character is
Dame Hood, Red and Robyn’s mother, played by Centerstage artistic director Alan
Bryce, and the lucky man she picked on
this time was Randy, a gracious audience member.
Pantos also feature set
pieces that are like Vaudeville routines and which have absolutely nothing to
do with the story. Bryce and Taylor do the honors on a couple of these. In the
first, they attempt quite incompetently to put up wallpaper in a routine like something
from the Marx Brothers or perhaps a duet with Buster Keeton and Charlie Chaplin
in which they keep trapping one another between two boards and end up covering
each other with glue. The second of these Vaudeville routines involves city
names and highway signs. I never would
have believed it possible to come up with so many silly puns based on
Washington city names.
Little
Red Riding Hood
is a laugh fest and a joy to watch, with great pop music (with fractured
lyrics). It is loud and exuberant, and rather long at almost three hours, but
the kids in the audience at the opening matinee did not get tired. I suspect
they could have happily gone another hour or two.
WHEN: 7 p.m. Friday-Saturday, 2 p.m.
Saturday-Sunday, 2 p.m., through Dec. 22
WHERE:
Centerstage at Knutzen Family Theatre, 3200 SW Dash Point Road, Federal Way
TICKETS: $35 adults, $30,
Seniors (65+) and Military: $15; Youth (18-25): $12 17 and younger
INFORMATION: 253-565-6867, http://www.tmp.org
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