The most
farcical farce of all
By Alec
Clayton
Published in the Weekly Volcano, Jan. 23, 2020
Photo from left: Helen Harvester as Belinda, Jason Haws as Garry and Megan Ahiers as Poppy, photo by Shanna Paxton Photography.
The verdict has long been
in: Noises Off is funny. New York Post critic Clive Barnes called it “the
funniest farce ever written,” and Frank Rich in The New York Times said it “is,
was, and probably always will be the funniest play written in my lifetime.”
For directors and actors, it
is one of the greatest challenges ever. It’s like a Marx Brothers movie with
nine Marx Brothers. Building the set and manipulating set changes, plus the
complicated pratfalls and complex choreographing of the movement throughout
would tax the best of actors and directors. Director Corey McDaniel and his
nine-person professional cast at Harlequin Productions is more than up to the
challenge.
An error prone theater
produces a comedy called Nothing On, and — no surprise here, this is the
oldest comic trope in the book — everything that can possibly go wrong does.
Doors won’t open or won’t stay closed, props get lost or misplaced, costumes
fall off, people trip, fall and constantly miss maiming each other by inches.
They swing axes, sit on plates of sardines, stuff sardines down their shirts,
and get stuck in the rear end with a cactus spines. Plus there is a plethora of
backstage romances involving much deception. Simultaneously, in another classic
comic trope, people go in and out of the multiple doors and windows, narrowly
missing each other.
Photo from left: Lisa Viertel as Dotty, Jason Haws as Garry and Rebecca Court as Brooke, photo by Shanna Paxton Photography.
One of the actors, Rich
Hawkins as Selsdon Mowbray is a drunk who plays an incompetent burgler who
keeps getting lost backstage and making his entrances at the wrong time. Yet it
turns out that Mowbray is the best actor in the play within a play, which
explains why the cast works so hard to keep him sober. Jason Haws plays Garry
Lejuene, an actor who argues constantly with the Nothing On director Lloyd
Dallas, played by Alexander Samuels. When Haws’ character is forced to adlib,
which is practically every line, he can never complete a sentence. Aaron Lamb’s
character keeps fainting at the most inappropriate moments and getting tripped
up and losing his pants.
In Act One the troop is in
the final dress rehearsal. The set is the living room of a country home. The
homeowners are away. The housekeeper, Dotty (Lisa Viertel) sets a plate of
sardines on an end table and answers the telephone and fights with the director
who corrects her when she drops props and forgets to hang up the phone or pick
up the newspaper or do whatever it is she’s supposed to do with the sardines. When
she’s out of the room, Garry, a real estate agent, comes in which a girlfriend,
Brooke (Rebecca Cort) with hanky-panky in mind.
Somehow Brooke loses her dress and spends most of the play running around in
her lingerie and striking ridicuous “sexy” poses — intentional over acting at
its absolute finest. Unfortunately, it is hard to understand some of what she
says due to the character’s accent and exaggerated histrionics.
In Act Two the set is turned
around, and we see what’s happening backstage during opening night at the
Grande Theatre. There are signs everywhere warning actors and crew to be quiet
when the play is underway, so what we see is mostly pantomime, whispers, and
fleeting glances through a window of the actors on stage as they perform for an
unseen audience - while actors, the director, stage hand and stage manager
fight with each other backstage. This is one of the most inventive things ever
in theater, a stroke of genius by writer Michael Frayn.
Act Three is the final
performance of Nothing On, and by then the cast and crew are at each
other’s throats and have been in and out of each other’s beds, and the play
within a play is absolutely delightful pandemonium.
Noises Off, 7:30
p.m. Thursday-Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday through March 8, $35, $32 senior 60+/military, $20 student/youths Under 25, $12-$15 rush
tickets (half-hour prior to showtime), State Theater, 202 4th
Ave. E., Olympia, 360.786.0151, http://www.harlequinproductions.org/.
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