A funnier, if not better, ‘Mousetrap’ at Vanguard
- Share via
Tom Titus
Gales of laughter at an Agatha Christie murder mystery are about
as unexpected as, well, the Angels in the World Series. But stranger
things have happened -- and, indeed are happening.
There’s really not much to laugh at in Christie’s signature
mystery play “The Mousetrap,” but that doesn’t stop the performers at
Costa Mesa’s Vanguard University from ferreting out all the funny
business in its current production.
Christie painted most of her characters as eccentric oddballs --
unwittingly inspiring the board game “Clue” in the process -- when
she penned this whodunit set in a snowbound resort. The play has been
running continuously in London for more than half a century.
At Vanguard, director Gregory Mortensen has encouraged the actors
playing guests at the inn to amplify the peculiarities that loosely
define their characters, resulting in some over-the-top
interpretations. All this silliness evaporates, however, once murder
rears its ugly head late in the first act.
When the game becomes a matter of life and death, the performances
segue, for the most part, into the traditional mold, as each in turn
disputes his or her part in the crime. For those few who haven’t seen
“The Mousetrap,” the element of suspense takes hold of the production
with authority.
Tammy Joelle Coffin (who alternates with Danielle Melilli in the
role of a novice innkeeper) exudes a delicious warmth and
vulnerability. Sunny Peabody, one of Vanguard’s finer talents,
seethes effectively as her jealous husband, who resents the attention
his wife pays to certain other guests.
Adam Eugene Hurst is a flouncing reincarnation of the late
entertainer Tiny Tim in his posturing, overly chatty depiction of a
would-be architect who has usurped the name Christopher Wren. Chrissy
Tiholiz is stern, and one of the play’s few humorless personages, as
the retired jurist Mrs. Boyle. The other dour character is the
mannish Miss Casewell, nicely rendered by Mary House.
Director Mortensen lends an understated authority to the
background role of Major Metcalf -- no apparent relation to the
actress Desi Metcalf, who takes on the character of the mysterious
Italian Paravicini, a role usually portrayed by a male actor, with a
continental flourish.
As the detective sergeant summoned to investigate a murder before
it actually occurs, Timothy Larson renders a strong, exasperated
interpretation. Larson employs a well-calibrated sense of ominous
foreboding as he seeks to discover which of the guests might be
involved in the crime.
The action is played out on a meticulously delineated drawing room
setting designed by Tim Mueller. The costumes and makeup by Lia
Hansen preserve the 1948 period nicely, while Dan Volonte’s lighting
effects and the sound designs of Edward Portillo and Austin Henken
lend further credence.
There still remain a few theatergoers who haven’t seen “The
Mousetrap” (one accompanied me to Saturday’s performance). For them,
this classic whodunit will offer particular enjoyment.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His
reviews appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.