The Victorian Ladies’
Detective Collective
Patricia Milton
Stacy Ross, Jan Zvaifler & Chelsea Bearce |
Women viewed by men as second-class while
independent-minded, outspoken women are viewed with scorn and derision. Producers making unwanted moves on young
actresses as police openly disregard women’s inputs. Businessmen more concerned about their bottom
lines than they are of the safety and health of women.
Just more of the same that we read daily online or hear on
conservative TV and talk-radio shows?
Actually, these are descriptions of the realities facing the three women
in Patricia Milton’s new play, The
Victorian Ladies’ Detective Collective, a gripping murder mystery with much
built-in humor that takes place in London, 1893. The fact that the despicably dismissive
attitudes toward women of that long-ago era still exist today must certainly be
a message the playwright and Central Works want us to see in this world
premiere that is enticingly fun to watch while also a stark reminder that for
every two steps forward, there is often at least one step back when it comes to
equality movements – even after 125 years.
Only five years after the notorious, so-called Jack the
Ripper began ravaging a poor neighborhood of London and murdering alleged
prostitutes, in Patricia Milton’s thriller London is hit again with a series of
five, brutal and bloody attacks on young women, four who have died – this time
actresses from two particular theatres in the West End. Valeria Hunter runs a boarding house
specifically for young, single actresses – women whom many men of the period
consider in the same category as whores.
Her sister, Loveday Fortescue – a former, well-regarded actress herself
– has decided it is time to take matters into her own hands and to use her
skills of disguise, her keen interest in unsolved murders, and her disgust of
the ineptitude of Scotland Yard in order to find the killer herself before more
innocents are killed. Loveday is not
having any success convincing her sister (and her current source of livelihood)
that her plan is not absolute folly (“Your powers of deductions may be
over-rated,” said with dripping sarcasm).
However, a recently arrived American actress, Katie Smalls, comes to the
boarding house ready to employ her surprising martial arts skills and a brazen
boldness to be Loveday’s detective partner.
Stacy Ross |
As she portrays the insatiable curiosity, undeterred
determination, and the no-patience-for-fools that define Loveday, Stacy Ross inherently
brings to full bear her distinctively smoky voice, her countless ways of using
her facial expressions silently to say volumes, and her sheer confidence in
projecting any undertaken role. With a
round-and-stemmed magnifying glass always close at hand and a stack of saved
newspaper clippings and past notes-to-self ready for further examination, her Loveday
is overlooking no possible clue as to who and why all the vicious attacks.
In between surmising possible motives and identities,
Loveday rails at will about the current attitudes and treatment of women by the
male-dominated society of London. She is
clear that there are many men from all walks of life who might be the murderer
and many more who do not care all that much if the real killer is found or not. “These murdered women are scapegoats,” she
declares about a society of men where the thing “most terrifying of all [is]
the independent woman.” (It should be
noted that in 1893 London, one of the few avenues for women to be truly independent
was to be on the stage – and thus the low opinion society held toward
actresses.)
The more emphatic Loveday is that she must step in to find
this street-stalking beast – even though she has never actually done any
previous detective work – the more her sister Valeria dismisses the idea and
does all she can both to poo-poo Loveday’s plans and to beg her not to antagonize
the police, whom Valeria also dislikes and distrusts with a vengeance. Jan Zvaifler is the epitome of the
prim-and-proper, older sister who prefers to knit quietly in the corner,
worrying only about feeding her cat and taking as needed (which is quite often)
her ‘medicine.’ That the otherwise
posture-perfect, reticent Valeria becomes a ball of spent nerves – shaking and
twisting her hands quite uncontrollably when she needs another vial of laudanum
(i.e., tincture of opium) – is a matter she does not want to discuss with
Loveday. However, Loveday is equally as persistent in her efforts to halt her
sister’s drug dependence as she is to solve her crime mystery. The result is the two are often at snarling,
bickering, raised-voice odds. Only with
a reluctant bribe of a vial does the unemployed Loveday finally get the few
quids she needs to sponsor her detecting efforts.
Jan Zvaifler, Stacy Ross & Chelsea Bearce |
When the American Katie Small rushes into the boarding
house’s parlor declaring “my life is in danger,” the Southern-drawling actress
quickly moves from fright to fight as she volunteers to join Loveday as a
detecting partner. Loveday is skeptical
until Katie offers both her bicycle and her skills in fan-fighting, startling
both Katie and all of us in the intimate setting of the Berkeley City Club with
the loud crackling of her overly large fan as it opens with the flash of her
wrist to expose its metal spines.
Loveday becomes even more convinced as Katie proceeds to demonstrate –
with Loveday as her target – how the knife-sharp fan, her feet, and her
grabbing hands could annihilate any attacking male’s throat, jugular, or his
two “diddle-dippers” (or “slappers” as Loveday calls men’s testicles). To all this, Loveday comments, “Oh dear me,
Americans.”
Chelsea Bearce is fantastically funny while also fearlessly
brazen as a Katie who agrees with Loveday that the only way to stop the murders
is for they as women to take control. If
that means she must go into the seediest part of London to buy a controversial,
German book, Psychopathia Sexualis,
with its full chapter on sex-oriented crimes, so be it. With sheer grit and gusto but also with a bit
of cheerful sense of adventure, Katie even amazes the bold Loveday and
eventually helps convince Valeria it is time for her to join this three-person
collective of feminine ingenuity.
Alan Coyne |
Alan Coyne has the evening’s task of portraying three
different, despicable men who enter the parlor and who each eventually becomes
the women’s prime suspect as the barbaric butcher of the night. His bent-over, sneering Toddy comes to
deliver cat-meat to Valeria, wearing a blood-smeared, butcher’s apron and
practically hissing at the non-amused Katie and Loveday. As the local Constable Crane, he is
foul-tempered, none-too-smart, but always-superior-to-any-woman (in his own
mind, that is), a bobby who pops in wanting to interview all Valeria’s female
boarders and to deter any efforts of Loveday in meddling into police
affairs.
But Alan Coyne’s crowning achievement of becoming another
viperous visitor is as theatrical producer, Jasper Warren Winn. The
cock-headed, whiny-voided Winn is a member of the local Vigilance Committee, a
group of businessmen intent on finding a recent, foreign-looking immigrant to
frame for the murders. (Again, sound
familiar, 2019 Americans?) Winn is also
the former employer of Loveday who was once thwarted in his attempts to assault
her backstage and who then in revenge, ruined her reputation and her career among
other West End producers. In each of the
three men, Alan Coyne masterfully captures different aspects of the total
disregard men of the time (and too many of this time in certain states like
Alabama) had for women who showed any sense of free-thought and independent
undertaking. And we are left to
conclude, like the three women on stage, that any one of the three could in
fact be the sought-after murderer, so disgusting is each.
The real beauty of Patricia Milton’s fresh-off-the-press
script (she says in the program that she finished it during the Brett Kavanaugh
hearings) is that this captivating mystery and commentary about men’s societal
disregard for both women’s safety and sagacity is peppered with ongoing,
laugh-out-loud humor. Gary Graves
directs this award-worthy ensemble with an eye toward giving the audience a
periodic, popping surprise of the unexpected as well as continual intrigue of
the mystery and of the lives and histories of the three women we are fast
getting to know. The costumes of Tammy
Berlin are a mĂ©lange of Victorian styles, head-to-toe, with Debbie Shelley’s
properties populating the set with items that one-by-one play important parts
in the unfolding story. Gary Grave’s
lighting design brings the gas-lit hue of a late-nineteenth-century parlor to
life while the sound design of Gregory Scharpen provides not only appropriately
mood-setting music but also implanted tidbits of music that heighten the
melodramatic atmosphere of the mystery.
After being highly entertained and drawn both into the
mystery itself and into the developing, sometimes rocky relationships among our
three sleuths, none of us in the audience can be too surprised that this
production of Central Works’ world premiere of Patricia Milton’s The Victorian Ladies’ Detective Collective
has been extended in its run. The two
hours (plus ten minute intermission) literally fly by with at least one of us
(me) hoping that the playwright decides that – just like Holmes and Watson –
Fortescue, Hunter, and Smalls might deserve more mysteries to solve in a
sequel!
Rating: 4.5 E
The Victorian Ladies’
Detective Collective continues in extension through June 9, 2019 by Central
Works at Berkeley City Club, 2315 Durant Avenue, Berkeley. Tickets are available online at www.centralworks.org.
Photos by Jim Norrena
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