TOM TITUS -- Theater Review
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I must admit up front that “Much Ado About Nothing” has never been
counted among my favorite Shakespearean plays. But then, I had never seen
it done the way South Coast Repertory is serving it up, in the mode of a
1930s screwball comedy.
An imaginative concept can overcome a plethora of structural flaws,
and director Mark Rucker -- who turned “The Taming of the Shrew” into an
Italian street brawl set in 20th century New Jersey a few seasons ago --
has outdone himself in his staging of “Much Ado.” The setting may still
be Messina, Italy, but the flavor is the prewar Hollywood of Busby
Berkeley, where the Jazz Age reigns supreme.
As icing on this most comical cake, we get snippets of W.C. Fields,
Groucho Marx and Clark Gable’s closing line in “Gone With the Wind.”
There’s even a musical combo, which, for more seasoned audiences, will
recall the instrumental buffoonery of the late bandleader Spike Jones.
All these embellishments stretch the production to nearly three hours,
but they also render the artificiality of the plot much easier to digest.
And stellar performances by Douglas Sils and Nike Doukas in the leading
roles of dueling tongues Benedick and Beatrice amplify the enjoyment
considerably.
Sills, who earned a Tony nomination for the title role in “The Scarlet
Pimpernel” on Broadway, retains a bit of that character’s fey flippancy
as he matches words and wits with Doukas’ splendidly sharp-witted
Beatrice. One of the show’s most pleasurable experiences is watching the
reaction of each as they are set up, separately, for romance by their
scheming comrades.
Romance with a near-tragic tinge is conducted by Andrew Heffernan as
Benedick’s soldier buddy and Beatrice’s comely cousin, endearingly
interpreted by Julia Coffey. Heffernan virtually turns callowness into
into an art form as he is duped into believing his bride is not a
“maiden,” as it was delicately put in those days. And Coffey’s horrified
reaction at the wedding confrontation is chillingly effective.
Two superb performances emerge in the supporting ranks -- those of
Tony Pasqualini, as Coffey’s stunned and outraged father, and Michael
Louden, as the mercenary whose chicanery ignites the conflagration. Don
Took and Martha McFarland are splendid as the elder statespeople of the
respective camps.
Director Rucker must have perused the funnies avidly in his youth,
because he has endowed Robert Dorfman’s constable Dogberry with the
comically sinister traits of “Lil’ Abner’s” Evil Eye Fleegle. Hal Landon
Jr. excels physically as his equally dull-witted deputy, while Art
Koustik enjoys a brief, but pungent, turn as the sexton, with John-David
Keller as a pompous partner in crime.
As the villainous Don John, whose scheme to embarrass his nobler
brother (Preston Maybank) triggers the near-disaster, Joshua Fardon is a
study in sneering self-aggrandizement. Marika Becz is fine as Hero’s
duplicitous maid, Margaret.
Once the situation is rectified, the stage belongs to the disciples of
choreographer Art Manke, who turns the entire cast into a musical comedy
troupe. The high-stepping curtain call completes the homage to those
1930s musicals that so influence the SCR production.
“Much Ado About Nothing” may be Shakespeare’s most accurate title, but
the vintage musical comedy theme supporting the version at South Coast
Repertory will sweep you off your feet in a wave of nostalgia.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
FYI
WHAT: “Much Ado About Nothing”
WHERE: South Coast Repertory, 550 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa
WHEN: 8 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays, 2:30 and 8 p.m. Saturdays, and
2:30 and 7:30 p.m. Sundays until April 1
COST: $28-$49
CALL: (714) 708-5555
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