Contrasting comedies opening this weekend
Tom Titus
Comedy comes in all shapes and sizes. Two comedies opening in
Huntington Beach this weekend are examples of the contrasting nature
of the genre.
There’s the sophisticated comedy, epitomized by Philip Barry’s
classic play and movie “The Philadelphia Story.” Golden West College
borrows from that era in its production of Barry’s lesser-known play
“Holiday,” opening Friday.
Then there’s the belly laugh variety, typified by meek and mild
characters extricating themselves from situations forced upon them by
overbearing antagonists. An example is “The Foreigner” at the
Huntington Beach Playhouse, also opening Friday.
“Holiday” is described by its director, Tom Amen, as “stylish,
witty, romantic, fun and, best of all, it’s a real crowd pleaser.”
It’s also rarely presented to modern audiences, an element that
attracted Amen’s interest.
The original “Holiday” was made into a movie with Cary Grant and
Katharine Hepburn, the same duo who headlined Barry’s “Philadelphia
Story,” not to mention screwball comedies such as “Bringing Up Baby.”
It’s set in New York City around Christmas time and focuses on a
successful young man, Johnny Case, who’s engaged to a beautiful but
snooty young woman, the heiress to a large family fortune. Johnny’s
rebellious attitude toward the encroaching establishment -- as well
as a growing attachment to his fiancee’s sister -- provide the
ingredients for conflict in this play, which has been updated from
the 1930s to the ‘50s, which reflected a similar socially and
politically conservative attitude.
Performing in the Golden West cast will be Mark Bedard, Tara
Redepenning, Christa Mathis, Joshua Matheson, Nick Cook, David
Snyder, Kris Kelly and Rebecca Fetscher.
“Holiday” will run for two weekends, playing Fridays and Saturdays
at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 3 p.m. through Nov. 16 in the college’s
Mainstage Theater. Ticket information may be obtained by calling the
box office at (714) 895-8150.
Meanwhile, the Huntington Beach Playhouse is about to raise the
curtain on “The Foreigner,” Larry Shue’s rib tickler about a shy
Briton spending a weekend at a Georgia fishing lodge and pretending
not to speak or understand English so he won’t have to converse with
the local citizenry.
This guise gets him into a steaming kettle of hot water as he
unintentionally becomes privy to an impending coup by the local Ku
Klux Klan chapter, and is called upon to head up the defending
forces. In the meantime, he’s busy “learning English” from a most
unlikely instructor, a teenage “slow learner” who teaches him the
two-syllable pronunciation of “fork.”
Gary Page plays the “foreigner” of the title, with Christy Joy
Smith, Josha Crowley, Jozeph Wise, David Cunningham, Kip Hogan and
Joshua Collins completing the cast.
“The Foreigner” will be presented 16 times over the next three
weekends at the playhouse, 7111 Talbert Ave., Huntington Beach, in
the Central Library complex. Curtain times are Thursdays and Fridays
at 8 p.m., Saturdays at 3 and 8 p.m., Sundays at 2 and 7 p.m. through
Nov. 17 (matinee performance only closing day). Reservations are
being taken at (714) 375-0696.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Independent.
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