Theater review -- Tom Titus
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Given the sort of cutting-edge, envelope-pushing, often bizarre
choices UC Irvine’s drama department has made lately, it might seem a bit
strange closing the season with a 60-year-old play by the author of “Our
Town” and “The Matchmaker.”
Yet Thornton Wilder’s “The Skin of Our Teeth” bears a much closer
resemblance to a few of UCI’s previous offerings -- “The Love of Three
Oranges” and “Promenade” -- than it does to the aforementioned works,
between which it was tucked in 1942. Wilder was years ahead of his time,
seemingly anticipating the avant-garde and absurdist movements of the
1960s and ‘70s.
At UCI, director Keith Fowler has mounted a wonderfully probing
production that not only breaks the fourth wall but kicks the stuffing
out of it. From the outset, the audience is in on the gag, or the
succession of gags, which veer from biting satire to dark allegory and
back again.
The play centers on Wilder’s eternal survivors, the Antrobus family
who prevail for thousands of years from the Garden of Eden (their
surviving son was named Cain, though now he prefers Henry) to a
post-apocalyptic period after mankind is all but devastated by a nuclear
war. One must remember that the play was written just a year into World
War II, when the outcome was anything but preordained.
Even more, however, its focus is on Sabina, the feisty family maid and
liaison to the audience. Lisa Clayton, UCI’s resident scene stealer and
scenery chomper, finally has a role suited to her prodigious comic
talents. She attacks it with glee and gusto. With periodic outbursts of
“I can’t play this scene,” Clayton reminds us that it’s only make-believe
before stepping back into character and beautifully attacking the show’s
juiciest role.
Chris Wolfe assumes the everyman character of George Antrobus --
inventor of the wheel, the alphabet and various other examples of man’s
progress -- with a wry command and an overreaching sense of weariness. As
his cold, overprotective wife, Maria Mayenzet successfully spoofs the
domestic control exercised by the women of the period.
Thrust from the wings into an occasional confrontation with the
actors, Chris Smith portrays the exasperated stage manager, Mr.
Fitzpatrick, with seething officiousness. Safiya Fredericks has a
splendid extended cameo as a fortune teller in the second act, set on an
Atlantic City boardwalk, but still just before the Great Flood of
biblical lore.
The large and versatile supporting cast fills a variety of roles from
dinosaurs to understudy fill-ins, the latter guise part a pointed
third-act spoof of the theater in general. Of these, Bonnie Walker makes
the most indelible impression as a statuesque beauty with little between
her ears.
Abetted by authentic-looking black-and-white newsreels and a breakaway
setting superbly designed by Christopher Sousa-Wynn, “The Skin of Our
Teeth” is satire with all the stops out. Samantha White’s costumes and
the lighting designs of Jason Byron Teague also are first rate
throughout.
If Wilder spared the backstage crew with his scant designs for “Our
Town,” he made up for it a few years later with “The Skin of Our Teeth,”
wherein everything but the proverbial kitchen sink is utilized. And in
the comic chaos ostensibly preceding the third act, UCI’s backstage
worker bees are revealed assembling and disassembling the elaborate
plethora of properties.
Despite its dark corners, “The Skin of Our Teeth” is an optimistic,
ultimately uplifting exercise that celebrates mankind’s survival
instinct. At UCI, Fowler’s ensemble revives this offbeat classic with an
abundance of style and energy.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
FYI
WHAT: “The Skin of Our Teeth”
WHERE: UC Irvine Little Theater at the UCI campus, corner of Campus
and University drives
WHEN: 8 p.m. tonight, Sunday and Wednesday through June 8, and 2 p.m.
June 8
COST: $7-$11
PHONE: (949) 824-2787
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