‘Anton in Show Business’ roasts the theater at OCC
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Tom Titus
In a classic example of biting the hand that’s been feeding her,
playwright Jane Martin has come up with a viciously comical attack on
the theater itself with her satirical broadside “Anton in Show
Business.”
Orange Coast College has mounted the local premiere of this
outlandish comedy, which manages to stick it to Broadway, as well as
off-Broadway, regional theater and television with fiendish relish.
The characters -- caricatures, really -- are drawn with a brush broad
enough to paint the sets for “War and Peace.”
In a twist on the custom of the olden days in theater, when female
characters would be played by male actors, Martin’s didactic
bloodbath has reversed the process, with women populating a number of
men’s roles. In fact, there isn’t a male body on the OCC stage --
even in the role of a Texas folk singer who has a heated overnight
affair with one of the three principal actresses.
“Anton in Show Business” revolves around the planned production of
Anton Chekhov’s “The Three Sisters” by a regional theater in San
Antonio. Naturally, the trio of ladies who land the principal roles
are a highly contrasted lot -- a TV actress with considerable clout,
a veteran actress who has more than 200 productions (and no salary)
to her credit and a ditsy, virginal third-grade teacher who murmurs
“forgive me, Jesus” after every mildly off-color remark.
Astonishingly, these three disparate personalities mesh as allies,
joined in battle against the myriad forces which threaten the success
of their project. And, under the gleeful directorial hand of John
Ferzacca, these forces emerge with a richly outrageous sardonic bite,
from the passionate producer to the dispassionate financier. Even the
local critic comes in for a backhanded swat.
Joni Ross enacts the TV star Holly with an earthy fervor and
liberal exercising of power, cavalierly dismissing directors whose
concepts clash with her own. Jessica Kelly is charmingly naive as the
chirping ex-schoolteacher, while Alison Hartson plays the hardened
serious actress with balancing quantities of acid tongue and
reluctant tenderness.
A standout in the supporting ranks is Carrie McKinney as Kate, the
show’s emotionally involved producer. Laura Viramontes impresses as
the tough-talking stage manager and narrator. Katie Hall goes all out
in her interpretation of a shuffling, Chekhovian director with a bit
of madness in her Method, while Hanalena Schwartz represents the
chilly business side of the theater-financing operation.
Breaking the fourth wall, shattering it really, is Shea Smillie as
Joby, who’s in the audience reviewing the show (Martin’s “Anton,” not
Chekhov’s “Three Sisters”) for a publication resembling the
Pennysaver, and who frequently interrupts the action to question the
characters’ motivation. It’s an entertaining gimmick that ultimately
loses a bit of steam at the end.
“Anton in Show Business” is less a comedy about the theater than a
series of acid-tipped arrows thrust at various aspects of the craft,
most of which hit home deliciously while others fall a bit flat.
Director Ferzacca succeeds in sustaining interest and establishing
some splendid characterizations in his company of caricatures.
Theater people should get a tremendous kick out of the OCC
production, while those not involved with the stage may wonder just
what all the fuss about. Either way, “Anton” is a different, somewhat
jaded approach to the art of show business.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His
reviews appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
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