|
You might think that a nearly 90-year-old play by the author of Peter Pan, rather preciously titled Alice Sit-By-the-Fire, would come across dated and dull to contemporary audiences. If so, think again.
Alice Sit-By-the-Fire turns out to be one of the freshest and funniest comedies of this New Year’s season.
Written long before TV, radio, and “talking” pictures had become reality, this often farcical tale of a teenage girl’s reunion with parents she hasn’t seen in five years feels in many ways as brand new as a movie just out on DVD.
Alice Sit-By-the-Fire is the comedy of errors which ensues after 17-year-old Amy Grey misinterprets a kiss between her mother and a family friend, assumes that they are having a clandestine affair, and decides to take matters into her own hands and put an end to it, leading to a second act which has her visiting the family friend’s apartment and (in the best French farce tradition) hiding in the nearest closet when her unsuspecting mom arrives.
There are two ways in which Alice Sit-By-the-Fire is quite definitely a period piece, and those are thankfully explained in the director’s notes. First, it was apparently common in the early 1900s for a British officer and his wife, stationed in India, to leave their children back home in England under the care of a nanny for years at a time, and even for a newborn baby to be shipped back to England until the eventual return of its parents. Second, London theater of the era featured a particularly popular genre of plays in which there were always, as Amy tells it, three characters, “a lady and two men, one of whom is not her husband.”
The first bit of trivia leads to a very funny first act in which just returned expat Alice finds herself committing blunder after blunder in her attempts to bond with daughter Amy, Amy’s slightly younger brother Cosmo, and Alice’s 8-month-old baby daughter. Alice, who expects her infant to greet her with smiles and laughter, is greeted instead by a bawling child who much prefers his doting nurse to this stranger. When Alice greets Cosmo with open arms and maternal affection, she finds a boy who wants nothing of his mother’s cuddles, and ends up smacking him, however inadvertently. Trying to correct this overly effusive display of motherly love when meeting Amy, Alice makes just the opposite mistake, acting all cool and proper with a daughter who longs to be hugged. Poor Alice just can’t seem to get anything right!
Then comes the overheard “assignation,” which is in truth a quite innocent meeting between old friends Alice and Steve. Amy, who has spent every night of the last week with her best chum Ginevra at the theater absorbing the “real life” romantic triangles required by these “bad girl melodramas,” determines to set things right by going to Steve’s “chambers,” (the lovers in these melodramas always meet in the man’s chambers) and demanding from him “the letters!” (the man always keeps love letters written to him by his married paramour.)
Looking with her long blond hair and Indian tunic something like a 1960s flower child just returned from a visit with the Maharishi, Alley Mills gives a charmingly quirky (and truly stellar) performance as Alice. Mills is touchingly distraught when she realizes that she doesn't even know how to hold her baby daughter and needs to be shown how to do so by Cosmo. Such a pitiful mother she is, bemoans Alice to her husband. “He saw through me right away, as did baby,” she reveals ashamedly, and adorably.
Bruce French also does fine work as Alice’s somewhat older husband, the Colonel, the kind of man who, confronted with a crying baby, tells the nurse “I refuse to have anything to do with her till she comes to a more reasonable frame of mind.”
Wide-eyed and zaftig, Betty Wigell captures teenage Amy’s naiveté as well as her excitement at becoming a kind of private detective and defender of her mother’s honor. As Ginevra, Tania Getty, with her high cheekbones and very proper bearing, provides a more elegant counterpoint to Wigell’s cuddliness.
Miles Marisco gets many laughs as Navel Cadet Cosmo, who, worried that his father is going to slobber all over him with kisses, does everything humanly possible to keep his distance from him. Having been given the “beastly” name of Cosmo, the young cadet tells his father that before people, “you needn’t call me anything. If you want to attract my attention you could just say "Hst!"
Understudy Clarinda Ross is sure to get many opening night kudos for her very funny performance as the Nurse, who fears that she will be replaced by “a black woman from India, a yahyah they call them.” When Alice asks to see her baby, Ross responds with a nearly hysterical “You won’t touch her, ma’am?!” A comic gem of a performance.
Neil McGowan, as Steve, shows us a man who may just have a longtime crush on Alice but is too respectful of her marital status to ever declare himself. McGowan is especially funny in the second act as he reacts with astonishment and confusion at Amy’s outlandish accusations.
In a sparkling cameo performance which earned her deserved applause upon exiting, Kristina Harrison portrays Steve’s landlady’s servant Richardson, “wistful at the sight of food.” It’s a treat to watch Harrison’s confusion at Amy’s repeated demands to see Steve’s “man.” (According to Amy, men like Steve “always have a man,” though in fact Steve could hardly afford to hire one.)
Orson Bean appears briefly at the beginning of each of the play’s three acts in the role of “The Playwright,” setting the scene for what is about to ensue. Bean is, simply put … Orson Bean, and that alone is a delight for all who have seen his many appearances on To Tell The Truth, and other classic TV game shows.
All the actors affect English accents, with the exception of Bean who is essentially playing himself. Mills and French are close to perfect, though some of the cast are rather less successful, something which may prove a distraction to audience members who are sticklers for correct dialects.
Joe Olivieri has directed Alice Sit-By-the-Fire with attention to both performance and pacing, and the result is a swiftly moving and often uproariously funny production. Scenic designer Stephanie Kerley-Schwartz has made excellent use of Pacific Resident Theatre’s smaller 40 seat space, giving us an elegant London living room full of Amy’s unfinished projects. (“Every art decoration I try goes out (of style) before I have time to finish it.”) Rudy Dillon has designed elegant early 20th century costumes. Keith Stevenson’s sound design and Dan Weingarten’s lighting design are first rate.
With its large subscriber base, Pacific Resident Theatre is guaranteed a long and successful run with Alice Sit-By-the-Fire. In addition, with the glowing reviews and positive word-of-mouth this fine and funny production is likely to inspire, there will surely be numerous “visitors” keeping the seats full well into the New Year.
Pacific Resident Theatre, 705 1/2 Venice Blvd, Venice, CA Through April 20. Thursdays through Saturdays at 8:00 P.M. Sundays at 3:00 P.M. RESERVATIONS: (310) 822-8392
Steven Stanley --December 29, 2007
Photo: Keith Stevenson
|