TAO is at it again with the third
installment of one-act plays at the Midnight Sun. This one’s called “An
Improbable Peck of Plays 3D.” Supposedly a peck indicates how many plays, but a
peck is not that kind of measurement. It is a
dry measure of eight quarts; the fourth part of a bushel, equal to 537.6 cubic
inches (8.81 liters). I looked it up. There are eight one-acts in this
evening’s festivities, so maybe they equate the number of quarts with the
number of plays. Anyway, that seems just the right amount. All eight are so
short as to seem more like skits on a television variety show — like something
by Sid Caesar and Imogene Coco or Carol Burnett and Harvey Korman. I’m not sure
why they call them improbable unless that refers to the main plot points to
most of these plays.
Debbie Sampson and Ryan Holmberg in “Guido in Therapy” |
Stephanie Kroschel and Bobby Brown in “Second Wind” |
Imagine
this if you can: Pygmalion, the Greek sculptor who fell in love with the statue
of the goddess Galatea, who comes alive and turns out to be a feminist who
berates the sculptor for lusting after her body while ignoring her mind and her
spirit. Yep. Pretty improbable. But if a statue of a goddess could come to life
in the 21st century, I can imagine it might happen something like this.
Novelist, actor, director and playwright Christian Carvajal made this the
premise of his play An Imperfect Galatea,
directed by Pug Bujeaud. Cheyenne Logan is delightful as the beautiful and
headstrong Galatea in this philosophical comedy, and Bobby Brown is equally
enjoyable to watch as the bumbling, not-a-clue Pygmalion.
Logan
plays a similar part in Narcissus and
Tiresia by Sammy Scott, directed by Morgan Picton, in which Narcissus (Sam
Johnson) hates everyone in the world because people are ugly but Tiresia has an
improbably cure for his condition.
These plays are all locally written
and produced. The writers are associated with The Northwest Playwrights
Alliance, which was founded right here in Olympia by Bryan Willis and now
operates out of the Seattle Repertory Theatre.
For
another comedy based on a totally improbable premise, look no further than the
first play of the evening, Second Wind
by Dan Erickson, directed by the duo of Vanessa Postil and Mark Alford of
Harlequin Production’s improve comedy troupe Something Wicked. Valerie
(Stephanie Kroschel) is a woman who goes to her doctor (Debbie Sampson) for a
checkup. Her tests all come back showing she’s in good health, but the doctor
is worried about something else, to wit, there is a man in a swivel chair
attached to her by a rope tied around her waist. Apparently the cure needs to
be something more than simply untying the rope. I will not spoil it any further
by divulging who the man is other than to say that he is famous. Bobby Brown
plays the man in the swivel chair and Dennis Worrell plays another character
named Tuttle who is rather disruptive to say the least.
Improbabilities
stack up with skits about people in therapy, or who should probably be in
therapy. For example: Amy (Sara Geiger). Amy believes she is living in a
Broadway musical. Or, more accurately, a life comprising songs from many
musicals. This one was written by Andrew Gordon, is directed by Mark Alford,
and also features Jodie Chapin, Maxwell Schilling and Worrell again.
My
choice of the most hilarious play of the evening is Guido in Therapy by Beth Peterson and directed by the team of
Alford and Postil. This one features Aaron Bredlau as the therapist, Sampson as
the patient, Beth, and the unconquerable Ryan Holmberg as Guido. Beth is in
therapy because she has an inappropriate relationship with her cat. She takes
pet love to a whole new level. Guido is the cat, and Holmberg has the cat moves
down perfect — the scratching, the licking, the grooming. I may never see
another cat video without thinking of him.
Other
one-acts filling out the evening are Next
Stop: Reckoning by Marcy Rodenborn, directed by Elizabeth Lord; Temperature on Mercury by Bryan Willis,
directed by Christian Carvajal; and Scent
of a Man by Solomon Olmstead, directed by Pug Bujeaud.
Aug. 28, 29,30,31 and Sept. 4, 5 and 6
at 8 p.m., Sept. 7 at 2:30 p.m., The Midnight Sun, 113
N. Columbia St.
Tickets: $12.00. Available at door night of show or online at brownpapertickets.com
Tickets: $12.00. Available at door night of show or online at brownpapertickets.com
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