A wild and crazy ‘Picasso’ at Civic Playhouse
Tom Titus
Even without advance knowledge of the play’s authorship, it would
be next to impossible to view “Picasso at the Lapin Agile” at the
Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse without entertaining thoughts of the
comedic antics of Steve Martin.
Martin wrote “Picasso” and undoubtedly envisioned himself playing
many of the major characters -- probably simultaneously -- since the
“wild and crazy” comic’s stylized blend of cerebral wackiness is
evident throughout. And director Kyle Myers adheres to Martin’s
proclivities faithfully, even adding an arrow-through-the-head prop,
which dangles, unused, from a coat hook as a tribute to the
playwright.
Martin envisioned an encounter between artist Pablo Picasso and
budding genius Albert Einstein in 1904, when both were in their 20s,
at the Lapin Agile, a Parisian bistro famed for is patronage by the
artsy folk of the time. Just for good measure, he threw in a
character from the future -- a side-burned singer who warned people
against stepping on his blue suede shoes.
Throw in some equally eccentric local characters, and you have the
recipe for some bullet-paced farce, served up by a company of actors
mostly new to the Civic Playhouse stage, but with the performing
talent and intellectual insight to make “Picasso” work most
successfully.
Peter Denlo plays the young Einstein with a passion for
mathematics and a spot-on German accent that elevates his performance
marvelously. Denlo scores highest by solving complicated theoretic
equations instantly, in his head, and making the dullest dialogue
crackle by his fervent devotion to the upper regions of science.
Picasso sweeps into the bistro in the dynamic, hedonistic form of
Mario Prado, whose character’s genius lies not only in art, but
romance. Prado dominates the stage as the youthful, temperamental
painter who refuses to be discussed in the same sentence as Matisse
and provides a splendid “heart” counterpart to Denlo’s “head”
character of Einstein.
Of the supporting ranks, Deborah Faurbach is the most memorable as
Suzanne, a sultry Parisian vixen who has known Picasso biblically and
returns for further study. Robert Wilson is fine in the comparatively
straighter role of Freddy, the Lapin Agile owner/bartender.
Harv Popick provides continual chuckles as an elderly bar patron
with weak kidneys who announces each trip to the restroom with
dramatic flourish. Olivia Braza simmers delightfully as Germaine, the
earthy waitress, while Marie Nussle has a juicy cameo as a countess
romanced by the young Einstein.
With greatness comes great pretenders, and Ben Marks renders a
representation of the latter category, an egregious faux genius named
Schmendiman. June Rubin sizzles as a young lady who’s captivated by
him, and Paul Labita has a manic turn as a highly charged art dealer.
Back from the future comes a young Elvis Presley, who completes
the trio of super-sized historical figures. Seth Alcorn has the
King’s look and mannerisms down splendidly in a terrific
interpretation of the legendary entertainer’s youthful version.
Art and science have never been more formidably, or hilariously,
at odds than in “Picasso at the Lapin Agile,” and the Civic Playhouse
pulls out all the stops to render this imaginary encounter most
enjoyable, from either an intellectual or a visceral view.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His
reviews appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
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