by Alec Clayton
Published in The News Tribune, April 6, 2018
(L to R) KYLE SINCLAIR (Black Stache), CHAP WOLFF (Smee) and the Ensemble Cast from the Lakewood Playhouse Production of "PETER & THE STARCATCHER" - photo by Tim Johnson
The Ensemble Cast of the Lakewood Playhouse Production of "PETER & THE STARCATCHER" - photo by Tim Johnson |
Lakewood
Playhouse’s South Sound premiere of “Peter and the
Starcatcher” is two-and-a-half hours of buffoonery with moments of tenderness
that will remind you of every comedy bit you’ve ever seen, from Willie Wonka to
Monty Python and Carol Burnett, to “The Rocky Horror Show” and “Pirates of Penzance” – the latter because there are pirates
galore in the show, and because of director John Munn’s unique stylings
recently seen in Lakewood Playhouse’s production of “Penzance.” This one
is not a musical, but there is a lot of singing in it and, if not dancing, at
least a lot of choreographed movement, particularly a lot of hilarious overly
histrionic posing in freeze-frame.
The
one drawback to this ambitious undertaking is the story itself. It is the story
of Peter Pan before he became Peter Pan and Captain Hook before he lost his
hand. Based on the novel by Dave Barry and Ridley Pearson and adapted for the
stage by Rick Elice, the story is a hodgepodge of loosely connected skits with no
dramatic arc until the bare outline of a story appears in the second act. It
starts out fall-on-the-floor funny but begins to drag in the second act. Some
cuts would have helped, but copyright laws prevent that.
What
the story lacks in cohesion is compensated for by outstanding acting on the
part of the 13-member ensemble cast. It is a true ensemble, not a few leads
backed up by an ensemble. Nevertheless, there are actors who stand out, such as
Kyle Sinclair as the sinister Black Stache. Theatergoers will remember Sinclair
for his standout role in “Avenue Q.” Sinclair plays this epitome of all b-movie
bad guys with grand gestures and comic timing worthy of the greatest of the old
silent-movie stars. Emily Cohen who plays the unnamed Boy (cq) who eventually
becomes Peter Pan as a sweet, unaffected, and brave young man. Cohen is also
the show’s fight choreographer. Kudos also to W. Scott Pinkston, who is
over-the-top silly as the lovesick Alf, in love with the delightful Martin
Larson, in drag throughout as Mrs. Bumbrake. And to Tony L. Williams (also an
“Avenue Q” alum) as the gruff and growly pirate Bill Slank and later as the
dumber than dumb Hawking Clam.
Scenic
designer Blake York does his usual primo job of designing a kind of rundown
waterfront scene that looks deceptively tacked together with scrap lumber but
is strong and serviceable. Lighting by Jacob Viramontes and Joy Ghigleri brilliantly
enhance the fast-moving action.
Munn and his crew deserve maximum credit
for pulling this mish-mosh together and somehow making it work.
WHEN:
8 p.m. Friday-Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday, through April 22
WHERE:
Lakewood Playhouse, 5729 Lakewood
Towne Center Blvd., Lakewood TICKETS: $20-$26
INFORMATION:
(253) 588-0042, https://www.lakewoodplayhouse.org/
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