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Towne Players of Garner Review
By
Scott Ross
Robert's Reviews
E-mail: RobertM748@aol.com
Farce is a scarce commodity in today’s American Theater, but it
wasn’t always so. The 1930s were awash in cleverly conceived comedies in which
mistaken identity, misunderstanding, verbal and physical dexterity, and
snowballing effects combined to form rapturous, loopy evenings of high and low
humor. (Door-slamming optional.)
The great American run, most often abetted by George Abbott, more or less
reached its zenith on television. “I
Love Lucy,” a model of farce construction, was also something of a
dead-end; no one really took on the challenge until some blessedly off-kilter
geniuses came up with “Frasier.”
While Ken Ludwig has shown promise with plays like Lend
Me a Tenor, the last truly perfect American stage farce was Sly Fox, Larry Gelbart’s excruciatingly -- almost impossibly --
funny 1970s Gold Rush adaptation of Volpone.
(Not coincidentally, Gelbart also collaborated with Burt Shevelove and Stephen
Sondheim on A Funny Thing Happened on the
Way to the Forum, the last great American musical farce before The
Producers.)
The British, of course, still excel at the genre. “Fawlty
Towers” was almost a textbook on the form at its most inspired --
although it should be said that British stage farce tends toward a somewhat
infantile preoccupation with sexual innuendo.
All of which goes to indicate what a concussive blow was dealt to native
farce by the early death of Larry Shue. With The
Foreigner, an enormously successful off-Broadway excursion (686
performances on its 1984 debut), Shue exhibited an enviable knack for both the
mechanics and the exuberance of classic farce. He wasn’t yet a master -- The Foreigner has its bumps -- but he might well have become its
reigning practitioner.
Although The Foreigner isn’t produced as often today as it was during the
1980s, it’s still a treat when performed with panache, as it is in the Towne
Players of Garner’s splendid season opener at the Garner Historic
Auditorium.
The show’s director, Beth F. Honeycutt, has mounted it in high style
and with an expert eye fully trained on timing, pace, and delivery. Her almost
uniformly excellent cast, headed by the voluptuously gifted Greg Flowers, plays
the thing at full-tilt while somehow managing to nourish the unsentimental
sweetness at its heart.
The Foreigner concerns the
almost pathologically shy British proofreader Charlie Baker (Flowers), brought
to the American South by a well-meaning friend who, to ensure Charlie’s
privacy, convinces the proprietor of a rural Georgia hunting lodge that his
companion speaks no English. Charlie’s hopes for a placid respite are
immediately compromised by the lodge’s gregarious owner, Betty Meeks (Frances
Stanley), a seemingly saintly minister (Tim Upchurch), his inconveniently
pregnant fiancée (Kelly Stansill), her semi-retarded brother (Rusty Sutton), and a property inspector
(Jack Chapman) with an unsavory agenda. Add in duplicity, conversations not
meant to be overheard, budding romantic attachment, prejudices of every variety,
impromptu “foreign” double-talk, and the tattered remnants of a Ku Klux Klan
chapter, stir, bake on high, and -- viola -- a peculiarly American farce rises
from the mix.
The Foreigner is the sort of
thing it doesn’t do to over-analyze: while the play itself is classic farce,
its set-up is more than a bit credulity-stretching, and the denouement forgets
such sticky bits of reality as the presumed existence and elasticity of
Charlie’s visa. And Shue’s dramaturgy occasionally fails him. It’s not
established, for example, that the fiancée’s brother Ellard is, like many of
what we now rather timidly call the mentally challenged, subject to fits in
moments of crisis. Thus, when he succumbs late in the second act, the audience
-- unprepared for Ellard’s agony -- reacts not in sympathy but with guffaws.
They assume it’s part of the comedy. And the eagerness with which these
Georgians accept Charlie’s “miraculous” gift for assimilating English
borders on the inane, if not downright stereotypical: the uneducated as
proverbial innocent, swallowing whole what others might rightly find suspicious.
Still, the play is so cheerfully good-natured, and so often wildly
hilarious, that such cavils scarcely register -- especially when played to
perfection, as it is here.
Tim Upchurch renders the ersatz reverend David Marshall Lee in all his
many colors: imperious lover, erstwhile humanitarian, grubby gigolo, and
slightly recalcitrant felon. Kelly Stansill starts by overplaying her irritation
as Lee’s compromised inamorata Catherine but more than compensates by shading
her growing admiration of and affection for Charlie and her increased devotion
to her brother with a sure lightness of touch that makes her gradual
humanization wholly believable. As the withdrawn and seemingly doltish Ellard,
who has more on the ball than anyone imagines, Rusty Sutton gets the details
absolutely right. His performance is effortlessly likeable and blithely comic in
its utter lack of guile. Becoming Charlie’s presumed English instructor (a
role bequeathed to him by the gently outraged Englishman), Sutton’s Ellard
slowly blossoms, his buried sense of self-worth illuminated by the newly lighted
candle within.
As the British demolition expert “Froggy” LeSueur, Don Howard is both
personable and comically flummoxed by the wholly unexpected changes rung in his
compatriot. His capsule summation of Charlie’s persona is so accurate at the
start that he cannot equate the milquetoasty schlemiel
he left at the lodge with the consummately rounded figure he encounters in
the second act.
Frances Stanley could scarcely be better as the kind-hearted (if
initially shortsighted) lodge-owner Betty. Stanley bubbles with eccentric humor,
reacts with uncomprehending dismay to the unexpected, and replicates with
unselfconscious aplomb that hoary cliché of the American who, faced with a
foreigner, shouts as if the man is hard of hearing rather than linguistically
impaired. Only Jack Chapman as the menacing Owen was lacking on the opening
weekend -- too uncertain of his lines to be as frightening as the character is
meant. Yet his superstitious terror at Charlie’s fake shamanism, a quality
that leavens Owen’s sinister mien, is exactly right.
Charlie Baker -- his very name a kind of code -- is the axis on which
everything depends. Without inspired lunacy and
unassailable strength of characterization in this central role, The
Foreigner falls to bits. In Greg Flowers, Honeycutt has something very like
the ideal actor. His performance is joyously and infectiously fearless, as
breath taking in its physicality as in its verbal acuity. Beginning as a man who
wonders “what it’s like to acquire a personality,” Flowers’ Charlie
swiftly metastasizes. Here, surrounded by strangers, he’s free to indulge his
innate ingenuity, finally embracing the full force of a life he could,
previously, barely tolerate.
Looking alarmingly like a younger, trimmer version of John Cleese and
locating something of Charlie Chaplin’s self-conscious playfulness in his use
of facial expression, Flowers creates a fully-formed comedic figure in the
exalted tradition of the Holy Fool, here fully aware that in folly lies
salvation -- or, at least, survival. Like Gogol’s Inspector General (or even
Jerzy Kosinski’s Chance the gardener) Charlie appears to be whatever his
interrogators need him to be. To Owen, he’s a figure of derision, smiling and
stupid -- someone before whom anything may be said without fear of
comprehension. To Betty, he’s a dream come true -- the longed-for foreigner of
her aging fancies. To Catherine, he’s a harmless sounding board in whom she
can safely confide her secrets. To Ellard, he’s both a playmate who by dint of
a language-barrier makes him feel smarter than he is, and an opportunity -- a
chance to emerge from his sullenness and congenital confusion and become a more
functional member of his own small society.
Flowers engages Sutton in a peerless pantomime routine out of Duck
Soup, executes a superbly imagined chicken-walk, relates an absurd narrative
in exquisitely polished double-talk, and beautifully intimidates Owen by playing
up to the old bigot’s susceptibility to the supernatural. It’s a performance
of such consummate skill and timing it borders on the supernal. My only
complaint is that the actor sometimes overdoes the mugging, nearly allowing the
“takes” that really score to get lost in a plethora of facial embroidery.
Still, that’s a mighty small bit of gristle to chew when what’s laid before
us is such an astonishing, robust, and perfectly ordered feast.
The technical director, Scott Honeycutt, has constructed a cunning field
on which to play this breakneck farce. The walls of Betty’s lodge are a deep
Hunter green and festooned with all manner of dead fauna, from mounted fish to
stuffed elk. There is also a rather ingenuously designed (and crucial) trapdoor
and Betty’s beloved spoon collection, wittily conceived. The costumes are a
riot of 1980s authenticity, from one hilariously striped Klansman sheet to the
Red Man Tobacco cap perpetually perched on Owen’s head. The apt make-up
extends to a rather perfect little wound on David’s Pleistocene brow.
It’s hard to dislike a play whose protagonist is dedicated to the
humanist task of “making each other more complete and alive,” which wears
its implicit condemnation of bigotry with so light a touch. And with Greg
Flowers on board, resistance, as they say, is futile.
The Towne Players of Garner presents The Foreigner Thursday-Saturday, Oct. 23-25, at 8 p.m. in The Garner
Historic Auditorium, 742 West Garner Rd., Garner, North Carolina. $8 ($6
students and seniors). 919/779-6144. http://www.towneplayers.org/.
EDITOR:
Since 1973, Robert W. McDowell has written theater, book, and music reviews for Spectator
Magazine of Raleigh, the Raleigh News & Observer, The Raleigh
Times, and North Carolina Magazine. Robert’s Reviews has
nothing whatsoever to do with any of these publications. Questions or comments?
E-mail RobertM748@aol.com.
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