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The Actors’ Gang webpage describes their revival of Adam Simon and Tim Robbins’ Carnage, A Comedy as a “raucous satire about televangelism and the state of religion in America," yet when the original production of Carnage went to New York in 1989, Frank Rich of the New York Times wrote, “There may have been a more amateurish work than ''Carnage'' on a professional stage in New York this year, but somehow the gods spared me from seeing it.”
This is precisely the kind of negativity that LAStageScene.com attempts to avoid. After all, our motto/goal is “emphasizing the positive in Los Angeles theater,” a pledge which I usually find easy to uphold. For many reasons (which I have enumerated on our FAQs page), I end up recommending about 85% of what I see each year. Still, when I think back over the past four years of playgoing (equaling nearly 1000 visits to the theater), fewer than a dozen times have I truly wished to be somewhere other than in my theater seat, and unfortunately one of those times was today.
That’s not to say that there is not prodigious talent involved in Carnage, A Comedy. The acting is across the board excellent, though Simon/Robbins’ script does require numerous over-the-top moments. V.J. Foster, as televangelist Cotton Slocum gives the kind of dynamic (to the point of physical exhaustion) performances that wins awards, and his younger counterpart, handsome Justin Zsebe as Tack, is intensity and commitment personified, even as his seemingly endless act two rant proves excruciating to sit through. Stephanie Carrie, as Dot, the voice of reason, is cute, charming, and touching, in a role that never once grates.
Act 1 is a fairly lighthearted satire on televangelism with occasional funny moments:
• Cotton teaching Tack how to “sell it” though effective timing: “The Lord, 2, 3, 4, 5, moves in mysterious ways, 6, 7, 8, 9.”
• Bouffant blonde wigged Donna Jo Thorndale as Tammy Faye-inspired Tipper Slocum trying to raise money for a children’s cancer hospital by asking viewers to support “those soon-to-be angels.”
• Chris Schultz as right wing extremist Ralph telling wife Dot, “He’s in my house. I have a constitutional right to shoot him.”
• Cotton, after a rap gospel number entitled “Go For The Gold,” adlibbing “I think we’re gonna call that ‘Hip Hope.’”
• Sugar sweet Pristeena (Lindsley Allen) telling puppet Foo Foo that drugs and alcohol are “Satan’s poo.”
Still, in my own case at least, the pretty much plotless first act ended up to be mostly a bore, I’m sorry to say.
Then, came the post-apocalyptic second act, which neither I nor the friend I attended with could make heads or tails of, and which includes two painfully long monologs, one by Cotton in breakdown-ready crisis of faith mode, the second Tack’s above-mentioned rant.
Only a handful of times have I kept wishing that a show would end, and one of them was today.
The talented actors/director/musicians/desingers involved in Carnage, A Comedy have done faultless work. Director Beth F. Milles has brought Simon and Robbins’ vision to vivid life. Sibyl Wickersheimer’s set is simple and stark, but appropriate. Alix Hester’s costumes are colorful and imaginative in act 1, stark but imaginative in act 2. Excellent background music and accompaniment for the play’s three original songs are provided by music director Cameron Dye, with Sandro Mastrobuono and Chris Schultz completing the excellent three- piece ensemble. Best of all are John Zalewski’s detailed sound design and Francois-Pierre Couture’s equally rich lighting. Still, in the immortal words of the Bard, "the play's the thing," and Carnage, A Comedy was not my thing at all, a theatrical experiment which failed to interest me.
There will certainly be people (theatergoers and critics alike) who will rave about this production. Though today’s audience’s response seemed muted at best, there were a number of bravos at curtain calls.
In the final analysis, Carnage, A Comedy is simply not my cup of tea, though I have nothing but praise for the work/commitment/talent of the actors, director, musicians, and designers.
Ivy Substation, 9070 Venice Boulevard, Culver City Through March 29 Thursdays at 8 pm Fridays at 8 pm Saturdays at 8 pm Sundays at 3 pm *The performance on Friday, February 22 will be sign-language interpreted for the hearing impaired. Reservations: 310-838-GANG (310-838-4264) or www.theactorsgang.com
--Steven Stanley February 3, 2008 Photos: Jean-Louis Darville
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