Youth-filled British melodrama finds life at Trilogy
Tom Titus
“Class,” as defined by the British of a century or so ago,
dictated one’s station in life and it pretty much boiled down to the
haves and the have-nots. The haves made the rules, and the have-nots
were left with what Marilyn Monroe in “Some Like It Hot” described as
the fuzzy end of the lollipop.
This situation was subject to change, as it does in Frances
Hodgson Burnett’s novel “A Little Princess,” now being dramatized at
Costa Mesa’s Trilogy Playhouse by a mixture of experienced adult
actors and charming youngsters. At least most of them are charming; a
couple have drawn the more meaty, bratty assignments.
“A Little Princess” is, on the face of it, a gloomy melodrama
centering on a privileged little girl’s fall from grace when her
diamond miner father dies, transforming her from a waited-upon young
student at an exclusive girls’ school to the equivalent of a scullery
maid at the same establishment. What raises it above the cliches of
its script are some richly defined performances by both adults and
children.
The central character of Sara Crewe, whose fortunes slip from
riches to rags, is beautifully enacted by young Andrea Adnoff (who
shares the role with Alexa Wildish). Adnoff is steadfast in her
refusal to give in to embitterment when the bottom falls out of her
life, and her bright, sparkly attitude proves quite contagious.
If you combined the Wicked Witch of the West from “The Wizard of
Oz” with Miss Hannigan from “Annie,” and drained the part of all
semblance of humor, you’d have Miss Minchin, the stern proprietress
of the young ladies’ academy. Leslie Williams reaches beyond
stereotype to create a truly hateful character, skillfully
interpreted, her face frozen in a perpetual scowl.
Of the handful of friends Sara makes at the school, Hailey
Villaire as the eager-to-please Cockney maid makes the deepest
impression. Mary Hering is quite effective as the perpetually hungry
Ermengarde, and Allison Aoun kicks up a temperamental storm as the
brattish Lottie (double-cast with Alanna Hanly). On the enemies list,
Kriston Aoun excels as the haughty, self-centered Lavinia.
Sharon Simonian muddles about as Williams’ cipher of a sister at
the school, parroting the ends of her sibling’s sentences. James
Mulligan is fine in a dual role of a French teacher and Sara’s
eventual benefactor, the solicitor of an elderly gentleman (Bob
Goodwin) who ultimately reverses Sara’s fortunes. Mulligan, as usual,
also designed the spare settings of low-key definition.
Director Alicia Butler has taken what might be a crashing bore in
less-accomplished hands and rendered it charming and appealing, given
its melodramatic nature. And as the running time is a scant 75
minutes, without intermission, there’s little chance of nodding off,
even in the early, talky segments.
This is the second time the Trilogy has produced one of Burnett’s
stories -- the first being the more elaborately ambitious “The Secret
Garden.” Both involve plucky young girls placed in stressful
situations and “coming through,” as it were. This production of “A
Little Princess” also comes through on sheer pluck.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His
reviews appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
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