Towne Players of Garner: Triangle Audiences Will Love Paul Rudnik’s I Hate Hamlet By Robert W. McDowell Triangle Theater Review
E-mail: RobertM748@aol.com
Triangle audiences will love the Towne Players of Garner’s community-theater presentation of I Hate Hamlet, which resumes April 27-29 in the posh auditorium of North Garner Magnet Middle School. I Hate Hamlet is a ghost story with a delightful twist: a famous television star from Los Angeles named Andrew Rally (Rob Smith) is now living in New York City and preparing to play the title role in a Shakespeare-in-the-Park production of Hamlet. He rents a flat once inhabited by the late, great star of stage and screen John Barrymore (Chris Brown), and accidentally summons the ghost of The Great Profile during an ill-advised séance conducted by his wacky real-estate broker and would-be medium Felicia Dantine (Meg Dietrich).
Even before his encounter with the supernatural, Rally is wracked with doubt about his ability to play Hamlet. But Barrymore is confident that he can screw Rally’s courage to the sticking point, teach him everything he needs to get through this acting ordeal and, ultimately, initiate the former star of “L.A. Medical” hospital drama into the Brotherhood of Hamlets. Unfortunately, it will take more than one of the greatest Shakespearean actors of all time — and arguably the greatest American Hamlet of his generation — to help Rally successfully navigate this complicated role.
Rob Smith is highly amusing as the overstressed Andrew Rally, who is both jittery about his imminent debut as Hamlet in front of the merciless New York critics and increasingly frustrated that his actress-girlfriend Deidre McDavey (Maggie Cochran) keeps deflecting his amorous advances. Although he is a bit short to play opposite Smith and doesn’t strike the swashbuckling figure of the matinee idol that was John Barrymore, Chris Brown has the mellifluous voice and the comic timing and sense of style requisite for this role.
Meg Dietrich is hilarious as she hams it up as the wild-and-crazy gal that is Felicia, and Maggie Cochran is a bit tightly wound but still funny as Deidre, an air-headed actress saving herself for her wedding night. Marty Smith is a little stiff — and her accent is a little too affected — as Rally’s elderly agent Lillian Troy, a former German immigrant who once had a torrid one-night stand with Barrymore in this very penthouse apartment; but Robert Boland is a terrific as TV director Gary Peter Lefkowitz, who only comes to N.Y.C. in order to try to lure Andrew Rally back to L.A. and is a philistine as far as Hamlet is concerned.
Towne Players artistic director Beth Honeycutt does a fine job of whipping these ingredients into a very enjoyable comic soufflé. The show’s unusually detailed set — co-designed by Honeycutt; her husband, technical director Scott Honeycutt; and Mike and Tammy O’Gorman — also adds an air of authenticity to the proceedings. And a good time was had by all at the company’s well-attended Saturday matinee.
******************* WHAT: The Triangle Theater Review is a FREE weekly e-mail theatrical newsletter, featuring previews and reviews by Robert W. McDowell and reviews by Scott Ross, Alan R. Hall, and others. (For brief bios of our contributors, see http://www.cvnc.org/about/critics-bios.html.) John Lambert and Classical Voice of North Carolina reprint our previews, reviews, theater calendar, and theater and film links online at http://www.cvnc.org/. The Triangle Theater Review previews and reviews are now listed under “Performance Reviews” on the CVNC home page. (Just click on the show title for the preview, which will be followed on the web page by the review.) For a comprehensive list of Triangle “Theatre Openings,” see http://www.cvnc.org/calendar/openings.html. For our extensive list of “Theater and Film Links,” go to http://www.cvnc.org/links/theatre.html. QUESTIONS OR COMMENTS? E-mail RobertM748@aol.com.
DONATIONS: If you value the comprehensive, in-depth local theater coverage that the Triangle Theater Review provides, please use your credit card to donate online via PayPal: http://www.cvnc.org/support/index.html; or mail a generous check today to Classical Voice of North Carolina, 3305 Ruffin Street, Raleigh, NC 27607-4025. Because CVNC is a 501(c)(3) organization, all financial contributions are tax-deductible. Be sure to indicate that you want to support continued online publication of the Triangle Theater Review.
HOW TO SUBSCRIBE/UNSUBSCRIBE: E-mail RobertM748@aol.com and type SUBSCRIBE TRIANGLE THEATER REVIEW in the Subject: line. To have your name removed from our mailing list, e-mail RobertM748@aol.com and type UNSUBSCRIBE TRIANGLE THEATER REVIEW in the Subject: line.
COPYRIGHT: Editorial content and all formats © 2006 CVNC and the respective authors. Reproduction in any form without authorization of Classical Voice of North Carolina and the respective authors is prohibited. CVNC will maintain an archive of standard previews and reviews from past issues for at least a year, at http://cvnc.org/reviews/archives.html. To request copies of web articles from 2004 and earlier, e-mail cvnc1@earthlink.net.
[back
to Past Shows main] |
|