TOM TITUS -- Theater Review
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Local audiences have become quite familiar with the plays of Richard
Greenberg thanks to South Coast Repertory, where no fewer than five of
them were born. One that SCR missed, however, was “Eastern Standard,”
which currently is being staged by the Orange Coast College Repertory
Theater.
One of Greenberg’s earlier works, “Eastern Standard” lacks the
maturity and focus of more-developed plays like “Three Days of Rain” and
“Everett Beekin.” Yet it reflects both the playwright’s comparative youth
and the late 1980s time period in which it was created quite
convincingly.
Greenberg assembles a disparate cast of characters in his study of
relationships -- one heterosexual, one homosexual -- which form the core
of this piece. To preclude the show from becoming over-yuppified and
tiresome, he added a couple of pinches of spice in the form of an
ebullient waitress and an obnoxious bag lady, then shifted the scene from
a Manhattan restaurant to a seashore cottage.
The result, thoughtfully staged by OCC students Sean Gray and Raine
Hambly, is a character-driven comedy with dark overtones that may
aggravate, but always amuses and entertains. It’s a demanding assignment
that is generally quite well developed.
The restaurant scenes, which lay the groundwork for the primary
relationships, introduce the characters to the audience and, by
extension, to each other. Stephen (Mark Hunt) and Drew (James Grant) are
lunch buddies -- the former keeping one eye on Phoebe (Malia Fee) at the
next table, the latter eyeing her brother Peter (Chris Fowler).
Stirring the plot as fringe characters, who figure prominently in the
story to follow, are the waitress (Daunielle Hauser) and the disagreeable
street person (Anne Gray) who repeatedly disrupts the social atmosphere.
It is through their intervention that Stephen meets Phoebe and Drew
begins pursuing Peter -- who is dying of AIDS but chooses to tell no one
but his sister, keeping a frustrated Drew at bay.
Fowler’s afflicted Peter is the most fully developed performance of
the company, along with Hauser’s effervescent Ellen. These two, in vastly
contrasting moods, keep the show’s motor continually revved up and offer
the most affecting performances, one on a more cerebral level, the other
a vapid free spirit.
Hunt and Fee conduct their romance on a tentative basis, he bemoaning
his professional ineffectiveness and she fretting over a dumped,
unbalanced ex-lover. They are center court in this game of the heart, but
Greenberg’s dialogue leaves them groping for their own centers.
Grant renders a flashy, demonstrative artist, transformed to jelly by
the reluctant Fowler and taking his frustration out on the others,
notably Gray’s denizen of the sidewalks whom the idealistic Ellen invites
to the summer house. Gray is the sow’s ear remarkably transformed into a
silk purse by the well-to-do romantics, and she conveys her make-over
impressively, like Eliza at the ball in “My Fair Lady.”
“Eastern Standard” may dip into the ludicrous from time to time, but
Greenberg’s biting script and the OCC cast’s earnest deployment keep the
vessel afloat and on course. At the very least, the show will lessen the
magnitude of your own problems.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
FYI
WHAT: “Eastern Standard”
WHERE: Orange Coast College Studio Theater, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa
WHEN: Closing performances 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, 2 and 7 p.m.
Sunday
COST: $5 and $6
PHONE: (714) 432-5640, Ext. 1
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