It’s a dead man’s party at the Playhouse
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Tom Titus
What do Edgar Allan Poe, John Barrymore and Jayne Mansfield all have
in common -- apart from the fact that they’re all dead?
Actually, that’s their primary common bond. Or at least it is in a
new dark night program at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse called “Old
Black Magic” by a group called Olio Theater Works. Those spirits, and
others, will rise again several times during October.
Terra Taylor Knudson, director of the playhouse’s current
production of “The Diary of Anne Frank,” has assembled these
luminaries in the form of actors from her Long Beach-based company to
perform Halloween-themed entertainment. She and actress Lauren Nave
created the original script, and both appear in the production.
Knudson has assigned herself the Mansfield role, for two rather
obvious reasons, and seems to enjoy sending up her character’s image
of an ultra-sexy actress forever to be remembered as “the other one”
-- in other words, not Marilyn Monroe.
Not everything in this makeshift production works to full
potential, but two actors render superior performances -- John
Sturgeon as Poe and Tim Thorn as Barrymore. Sturgeon crawls inside
the creepy poet to startling effect, while Thorn revels in the guise
of his hard-drinking, high-living theatrical legend, cutting down the
others with the surgical precision of repartee.
Unless you saw the movie “The Girl in the Red Velvet Swing” back
in the 1950s, chances are you’re unacquainted with Evelyn Nesbit,
whose husband, Harry K. Thaw, shot and killed her entrepreneur lover,
Stanford White, about a century ago. Erin Young prances prettily as
the old-time actress, while Paul Karliak and Beach Vickers snarl at
each other as Thaw and White, respectively.
All the spirited guests aren’t from real life, however. There’s
also Waitress Judy (Mona Chatterjee), who made Leslie Gore cry
because she wanted to on the 1960s record “It’s My Party.” But in
this version, Leslie got revenge with a bit of literal backstabbing,
changing the lyrics to “It’s my party and she’ll die if she wants
to.”
Co-author Nave as a high-class madam and Stephanie Thomas in a
hilarious turn as a wannabe star whose budding career was crushed by
a falling chandelier complete the guest list. The evening of
otherworldly merriment is presided over by a spooky voodoo priestess
called Marie Laveau (Patricia Newman), whose daughter (Ren Lavanchy)
waits in the wings to take over her “duties.”
Original music by the playwrights spices up the show, but the plot
itself is a bit muddy, dependent as it is on celebrity
characterizations. Basically, all these infamous personages are
spinning their wheels in limbo awaiting the breakthrough that will
send them either upstairs or down, needing only a sympathetic ear to
listen to their stories.
Two more performances remain -- Wednesday and Thursday -- at 8
p.m. at the Civic Playhouse, 611 Hamilton St., Costa Mesa. Tickets
are $10, and more information is available at (310) 266-3872.
NEW VIEW AT OCC
Orange Coast College will offer a “View of the Dome” this weekend
when Theresa Rebeck’s sharply written comedy opens a two-weekend
engagement in the college’s Drama Lab Theater.
The play focuses on a minor campaign worker caught up in a
political sex scandal. As might be expected, it contains adult
language and situations.
Playwright Rebeck has written extensively for movies and
television. Her work on the TV show “NYPD Blue” won her a Writer’s
Guild of America award for episodic drama.
Curtain will be Thursdays through Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sundays
at 2 p.m. until Halloween. Tickets are $10 for adults and $8 for
students, senior citizens and children under 12. Call (714) 432-5880
for more information.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Fridays.
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