Noises Off
Michael Frayn
Monique Hafen, Richard Louis James, Kimberly Richards, Craig Marker, Nanci Zoppi |
“[W]e’ve got bags, we’ve got boxes. Plus doors.
Plus words. You know what I mean?
... I’m just saying. Words.
Doors. Bags. Boxes.
Sardines. Us. OK? I’ve made my point?”
And while the actors are dealing with all those props that somehow
disappear and reappear through seven doors that one-by-one continually open and
slam shut (all in split-second coordination), we deal with our own laughs and
more laughs until jaws ache and sides hurt.
A play within a play where actors’ roles in one play that is being
rehearsed and performed mirror and accentuate their ‘real life’ quirks and bad
sides as seen in the other play – both being performed on and back stage – is the proven formula for one of the best (if not the best) farces ever to hit the stage
since Shakespeare. Michael Frayn’s 1982 Noises
Off is slapstick on steroids, with every trick in the book (trips, slips,
slides, and tumbles) tried at least once to command a chuckle. Noises
Off is also either a director’s dream or nightmare. As seen currently on the revolving stage of
San Francisco Playhouse, this Noises Off is
clearly Director Susi Damilano’s crazy, wacky dream come true!
Richard Louis James, Nanci Zoppi, Craig Marker, Patrick Lewis, Monique Hafen |
It is midnight before the new day’s opening of Nothing On in the English town of
Weston-super-Mare, and the final technical rehearsal is not going well – and we
are still only at the beginning of Act One.
Dolly cannot remember her lines, her sardines, or where the phone goes
when. Gary cannot understand the
playwright’s logic behind why he must carry a box and satchel upstairs (and
refuses to move an inch until he does). Brooke
can only recite her lines and move her arms like a pre-programmed robot (but a
damned pretty one); Frederick’s nose keeps bleeding; and no one knows if the
old guy, Selsdon, will show up sloshed or not – or even show up. Finally, the deep, tired voice of Lloyd the
director booms from somewhere in the dark back of the theatre, “I’m starting to
know what God felt like when he sat out there in the darkness creating the
world ... Very pleased he’d taken his Valium.”
Somehow, but barely, the troupe does get through Act One by
dawn of opening day; but a month later when we watch (as our Act Two of Noises Off) the first act of Nothing On reenacted at Ashton-under-Lyon
(but from the backstage perspective), things have actually gone from bad to
worse (but not yet worst ... That
will be our Act Three). Things are not
so happy among our little acting family, it seems. A lot can happen in a month -- romantic triangles,
secret trysts and break-ups, plots of revenge, and of course, ol’ Selsdon
finding the bottle of booze that everyone else is desperately hiding from him. Expect many tricks and counter-tricks that
involve everything from shoestrings to axes to prickly cacti – all happening
backstage while the play proceeds (sort of) hidden from us, onstage.
And the closing week in Stockton-on-Tees a couple months
later (our Act Three of this two-and-a-half-hour carnival ride called Noises Off) – this is the one that in
watching, you can only hope that everyone in the San Francisco Playhouse acting
team has plenty of medical insurance.
While we are almost rolling on the floor, they are actually slipping on
sardines, falling over clutter, plunging through windows, and tripping the
light fantastic down a flight of stairs.
The Cast of "Noises Off" & "Nothing On" |
This is a farce with a capital “F” that leaves no aspect of
the theatre experience untouched in its joyous, full-tongue-in-cheek
mimicking. Last-minute calls to the
audience that send old ladies up and down the aisles in confusion; the opening
and shutting of the stage curtain that won’t; the use, disuse, and misuse of
understudies; as well as what happens to lines of a play when the lines no
longer fit what is really happening onstage – these and more find their way
into a normal night of Nothing On.
All of the hilarity comes at us in non-stop, often breakneck
speed through the timing genius and creativity of Susie Damilano and her cast,
any of whom could easily have starred in the funniest of TV sitcoms of the
famed 1950s. At the top of the stellar
list is Kimberly Richards as veteran actress Dotty Otley who plays the
housekeeper Mrs. Clackett in Nothing On. Her fitful frustration over ongoing forgetfulness
is only topped by her temperamental tantrums backstage and righteous runs toward
revenge against fellow actors that occur as the acts progress.
Patrick Russell & Monique Hafen |
Another standout from beginning to end is the vacuous, vapid
persona that comedian-extraordinaire Monique Hafen brings to Brooke Ashton, the
actress who plays realtor Roger’s hot pick-up, Vicki, spending most of Nothing On in her scant, red, lacy undies. Brooke
remembers Ashley’s lines by silently but noticeably mouthing the lines of
others leading up to hers; and once she comes to her part, every exaggerated
movement and high, squeaky intonation must be done in the same way as how she
memorized it – or she comes apart. Ms.
Hafen’s Brooke could be the original source of all the terrible, non-PC blonde
jokes too often told at drunken parties.
Vicki/Brooke’s stage fling in Nothing On is Roger, who is Gary Lejeune in Noises Off -- both played
with full, frenetic fervor by Patrick Russell who will eventually take a fall
that has us all in the audience reaching to punch 911 for his emergency
aid. (But luckily our phones are turned
off, being the obedient audience members we are.) Funny also in his own brand of vacuity is Craig
Marker as Frederick Fellowes in Noises
Off, who
has a good, ol’ boy quality, a propensity to stop action in order to ask stupid
questions, and a habit of fainting every time he hears the word (shh-hh) blood.
Greg Ayers |
Nanci Zoppi is the ever-nice actress, Belinda Blair, who is
often the only adult in the room -- until she finally isn’t. Monica Ho is the stage manager Poppy who
trades her initial blank, don’t-bother-me countenance in Act One to one full of
news ready to burst but with no one to listen in Act Three. Tim the all-around, Jack-of-All-Trades for
the troupe gets pulled into everything no one else wants to do (fix the doors,
do the payroll, go get some flowers for my girlfriend, appease the waiting audience, Never quite on time but always
delightful with his raspy, aged, Irish accent is Richard Louis James as Selsdon
Mowbray, the actor who is supposed to be a near-retired robber in Nothing On but who has trouble leaving
behind his whiskey bottle in Noises Off long
enough to crash through the window.
Mr. James is the drunk you just want to hug.
Overseeing – but not really all that successfully – this
trying and temperamental troupe of thespians is the dashing, dapper Lloyd
Dallas as the director who swoops in like God above with a voice vying for the
next revival of The Ten Commandments. However, this
director is having his own casting problems on the side with one too many in
the role as his girlfriend. Johnny
Moreno progressively and hilariously loses any sense of stage- or self-control
as his problems of on-stage cast and off-stage capers mount into his own
volcanic explosions.
None of the boisterous merriment of either Noises Off or Nothing On would be possible without the two-level, multi-door set
designed to a ‘t’ for titillating, tickle-pink times by George Maxwell. Much of the ongoing gags of both plays comes
from the properties galore designed by Jacqueline Scott. (Where do all those sardines come from? I thought there was a current shortage.) The perfectly timed sound effects so
important for the plays’ jokes and jokesters have been masterfully designed and
executed by Cliff Caruthers while the costumes of Abra Berman range from sheik
to playgirl to petty robber and everything in between to add their own, many
guffaws. And special hats off to Migeul
“Mike” Martinez whose stunt choreography direction will hopefully, miraculously
see this cast as healthy the last night of the SF Playhouse run as the first.
What better way to escape the latest, often-depressing (but
often just as ridiculous) headlines than to spend an evening with San Francisco
Playhouse and Noises Off? I doubt Artistic Director Bill English could
have dreamed the real-life farce we are now living through when he selected
this scripted one for the 2017 season; but thankfully he did and hopefully the
seats will be full of butts for every, reality-escaping performance through its
closing on May 13.
Rating: 5 E
Noises Off will
continue through May 13, 2017 at San
Francisco Playhouse, 450 Post Street.
Tickets are available at http://sfplayhouse.org/ or by calling the box office at
415-677-9596.
Photos
by Jessica Palopoli.
The places I saw here are really wonderful, celebrating a special event like this with the beauty of nature is really cool. When you are in these Los Angeles event venues, there's nothing you can do than to be happy. I really liked it here.
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