TOM TITUS -- THEATER REVIEW
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Perseverance is a time-honored English trait. It got the Brits through
two world wars. And just before the first one started, it got one family
through a legal entanglement that could have been subtitled “Mission:
Impossible.”
“The Winslow Boy,” now on stage at the Newport Theatre Arts Center, is
based on the true story of a 14-year-old military cadet’s dismissal for
the theft of a five-shilling postal note. The boy proclaimed his
innocence, and his family took the case all the way to the equivalent of
our Supreme Court.
Playwright Terence Rattigan’s dramatization of the incident is a long,
demanding and quite talky period piece that nevertheless gradually
becomes quite riveting.
Splendidly staged, with attention to minuscule detail, by Darlene
Hunter Chaffee, the drama is an absorbing, thought-provoking production.
At Newport, two performances more than compensate for any other
interpretive weakness that might be present. The boy’s stern father, a
fearsome man with an ironclad mind-set, is superbly enacted by Jack
Messenger, while the family’s equally determined solicitor (lawyer) is
brilliantly portrayed by Graham Barnard.
Messenger skillfully peels several layers of his character -- the
regal patriarch, the determined father in quest of justice and,
eventually, the humbled family man who realizes the consequences his
quixotic quest may have on his family, and already have had on his
daughter’s impending marriage. Through it all, as his physical condition
painfully worsens, he pursues his course with steadfast resolve.
While playgoers may question the prospect of knighthood being
confirmed on so youthful a recipient, they undoubtedly will be greatly
moved by Barnard’s tremendous portrayal of the lawyer, Sir Robert Morton.
Barnard conveys a steely, unemotional and colossally egotistic
barrister who grills the young boy unmercifully to determine his
worthiness, then pursues justice at the cost of his own career.
Ellen Daphne Walcutt is somewhat uneven as the wife and mother who
fears the practical effects of her son’s case may outweigh any benefits.
More strength of character is required in the role, even in a time when
women rarely enjoyed equal status with men.
This latter situation is sternly addressed by Laurel Gregory as the
Winslows’ grown daughter, pursued by two equally unsuitable suitors. The
daughter reflects her father’s cool determination as an unwavering
suffragette, while muting her inherent didactic nature. Greg Stich enacts
her shallow fiance with natural ease.
The Winslow boy in question is played by Jonathan Polimeni with a
staunch sense of right-mindedness, though his interpretation could be
stronger with more variety. His older brother, a bit of a wastrel, is
done with ironic sourness by Colin Kramer.
Jennifer Boudreau injects what little levity the play offers as a
Cockney maid, while John R. Townsend flourishes in the stereotyped,
comic-relief role of an aging cricket player pining for the daughter’s
affections.
Therese Galien enjoys a spirited cameo as a newspaper reporter, joined
by John Gillies as her photographer.
The English drawing room setting is beautifully accomplished by Terri
Miler Schmidt, who both created and dressed the set. Rolf Stuauff’s
costumes serve the play admirably, and Michael Schrupp’s lighting effects
fit the mood splendidly.
“The Winslow Boy” could be deadly dull in the wrong hands, but Chaffee
and her cast at Newport have created a richly moving experience.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
FYI
WHAT: “The Winslow Boy”
WHERE: Newport Theatre Arts Center, 2501 Cliff Drive, Newport Beach
WHEN: 8 p.m. Thursdays through Saturdays, 2:30 p.m. Sundays through
Feb. 25
COST: $13
CALL: (949) 531-0288
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