A show-saver shines in ‘No Sex’ at the Playhouse
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Remember the movie “42nd Street” when Warner Baxter told Ruby Keeler,
“You’re going out there a chorus girl, but you’re coming back a star?”
Sheer showbiz movie fantasy? Doesn’t happen in real life? Well, not
often maybe, but occasionally a supporting performer will step in to
replace an injured leading actor and walk off with the show in the
process. It’s happening right now at the Huntington Beach Playhouse.
Two days before opening night, Scott Narvers suffered a serious
collarbone injury in a fall during rehearsal for the farcical comedy “No
Sex, Please, We’re British.” Director Patrick Fennell called on Kurt
Finney, who was playing the minor role of a police superintendent, tofill
the critical gap, bringing in Warren Wilgus to assume Finney’s old
assignment.
Finney not only has filled the role, but mastered it -- no small order
in this frenetically paced bit of pandemonium. Learning the lines in two
days is an admirable task in itself, but adapting to the rough and tumble
stage business this show demands is a Herculean task, and Finney has
pulled off the near-impossible feat of meshing seamlessly into the show.
“No Sex, Please” is a vintage piece of bawdy chicanery from
playwrights Anthony Marriott and Alistair Foot, which focuses on a
newlywed couple expecting Scandinavian glassware in the mail, but who
instead receive parcels of Nordic porn. As the blue stuff keeps pilingup,
the bride and groom scheme frantically to dispose of it, delegating most
of the disposal duty to the clean-cut junior clerk in the husband’s bank
-- the role thrust suddenlyupon Finney.
James W. Gruessing Jr. and Mindy Krejci keep up the merciless comic
pace as the young couple, but it’s Finney who gleans the most laughter
with one sight gag piled on another. Gruessing’s manic exasperation rives
the sequences as his character functions as sort of a theatrical traffic
cop, bringing on one gag in one door while booting another out.
The newlyweds’ porno problem is exacerbated by the arrival of his
genteel mother, who proceeds to make herself a bit too comfortable at
home. Jeanne Nelson functions smoothly in the role, with brittle
invective masked by polite discourse. Gordon Marhoefer cuts a stately
figure as the bank manager with an interest in Nelson’s principal, among
other things.
Wilgus’ nosy police superintendent always seems to arrive at the most
inopportune time, while Philip Andrews enters as a snooty bank examiner
and ultimately becomes the centerpiece of a three-way erotic
romp-engineered by the sultry Vanessa Ray and Trish Riley as a pair
ofpleasure princesses.
Shakespeare or Shaw it’s not, but “No Sex, Please, We’re British”
waves the Union Jack with vigor, and Fennell’s Huntington Beach actors
tackle the plot’s absurdities with alacrity. Gruessing also designed the
multi-doored setting and its constantly closing kitchen hatch door, which
eventually gets its comeuppance in the play’s final moment.
Freewheeling farce, when properly done, can be immensely enjoyable,
especially when it overcomes the odds the way the Huntington Beach
Playhouse’s production has with Kurt Finney vaulting to stardom virtually
overnight. This one is as raunchy as they come, and also asfunny.
CUTLINE: Jeanne Nelson, Mindy Krejci and Gordon Marhoefer enjoy a rare
quietmoment in the Huntington Beach Playhouse’s riotous farce “No
Sex,Please, We’re British.”
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Independent.
F.Y.I.WHAT: ‘No Sex, Please, We’re British’
WHERE: Huntington Beach Playhouse, 7111 Talbert Ave., Huntington Beach
WHEN : 8 p.m. Thursdays and Fridays; 3 and 8 p.m. Saturdays; 2 and 7
p.m. Sundays through March 10
COST: $14 - $17, plus $1 city surcharge PHONE: (714) 375-0696
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