Theater Review
Tom Titus
It’s difficult to mentally connect the urbane comedy of Neil Simon
with the bucolic silliness of “Fools.” Even on the third or fourth
viewing, the two entities are as serendipitous as a fish on a bicycle.
Nevertheless, Simon did indeed create this Russian fable about a
village under a 200-year curse of stupidity, and the determined
schoolmaster striving to lift it. And local community theater groups
continue to find nuggets of comic gold buried beneath its surface.
The latest company to venture into this simple Simon play is Costa
Mesa’s new Trilogy Playhouse, which is generating a good deal of laughter
from this meager comedy under the direction of Alicia Butler. Credit a
cast dedicated to projecting abject stupidity, altogether
unself-conscious, for the success the production enjoys.
Butler has double cast four roles, and when one quartet is not
performing, their duties are warming up the audience before the show and
at intermission, enacting the vacuous villagers as background characters.
It’s an interesting, and effective device.
At Sunday’s performance, the central role of the harried teacher
working feverishly to open the mind of his beloved was taken by James
Mulligan -- who, in addition to being one of the company’s leading
actors, also designs the settings, in this case quite handsomely.
Mulligan gives a yeoman-like effort as the only intelligent being
among a coterie of imbeciles, sharing his frustrations in pithy asides to
the audience. The object of his affection, on this evening, was Leigh Ann
Hubbard, who renders a marvelously vacant characterization masking a
seductive charm.
John Townsend and Sharon Simonian, the other alternately cast actors,
impress as Hubbard’s eager-to-please parents, yearning for a smidgen of
knowledge and ecstatic at their daughter’s minor accomplishments (such as
choosing the correct door to exit through).
Two supporting performances stand out for their richly exuberant
interpretations. Karin Lindberg Freda is marvelous as the bumbling
postmistress and Sara Ann Walker is stooped as well as stupid as the
shrewd peddler who sells flowers as fish.
Scott Narver rolls his eyes impressively as a clueless shepherd who
has lost his first name as well as his sheep. George Pelham is a suitably
sonorous magistrate and Sergei Sage is effective as the town butcher --
and invaluable to the cast as a Russian dialect coach.
The heavy in the piece -- piqued because the audience prefers his
rival -- is smoothly enacted by Jack Warner, almost too smoothly since
his clever reactions often are at odds with his supposed stupidity.
The other four leading actors -- Christopher Aruffo, Karen Chapin,
Richard Freda and Sharon Schwanz -- function nicely on alternate evenings
as atmospheric characters. Their interaction with the audience has the
effect of loosening up the viewer for this strange exercise in Simonized
silliness.
Mulligan’s scenic designs give the impression of depth and detail, and
the costumes (uncredited) are equally effective in conveying rustic
Russia.
Simon’s “Fools” may not be “The Odd Couple” or “Rumors,” being an
acquired taste and light years from the playwright’s usual bailiwick. Yet
the Trilogy company brings all this foolishness center stage in a very
enjoyable production.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews appear
Thursdays and Saturdays.
WHAT: “Fools”
WHERE: Trilogy Playhouse, 2930 Bristol St., Costa Mesa
WHEN: 8 p.m. Thursdays through Saturdays, 7 p.m. Sundays through May 14
HOW MUCH: $15 and $20
PHONE: (714) 957-3347
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