Actors get ‘Jest’ deserts
Tom Titus
Playwright James Sherman missed the opportunity for a good TV
sitcom when he wrote “Beau Jest” as a stage comedy. There’s enough
potential for funny business here to last at least a season.
Nevertheless, it’s a theater piece and it’s tickling audiences at
the Newport Theater Arts Center, where a young woman is going
comically berserk trying to obey her parents’ fondest wish, that she
find herself a nice Jewish boy.
Sarah (Kristina Leach) literally kisses off her gentile suitor
(Mitchell Cohen, in an ironic bit of casting) to welcome an actor
from a local Chicago escort service (Michael Serna) to impersonate
her Jewish boyfriend and placate her parents (Renee Oran and Sy
Schwartz), as well as her suspicious brother (David Colley).
The trouble is, the escort isn’t Jewish either -- though he’s
played a few Jews on stage, which sees him through the first few
rounds of “Meet the Parents.”
Director Jack Millis sets a snappy pace, and the actors keep it
rolling through some awkward, if not improbable, situations.
Although the play is an ensemble comedy, the stage belongs to
Leach. Frustration, well played, can be very funny -- Leach makes it
hilarious with her facial “takes,” over-the-top reactions and
continual efforts to maintain control over a slippery situation.
Serna is the wild card in this deck. Having been assigned a Jewish
character, this part-time actor plays the role for all it’s worth,
including returning a blessing at dinner which he picked up from
playing Perchik in “Fiddler on the Roof” and tossing in a Yiddish
expression remembered from “Cabaret.”
Oran and Schwartz are perfectly cast as the kvetching parents,
particularly Oran, who has played the mother’s role before. Schwartz
has a great second-act scene that allows him to expand his range
immensely.
Cohen, sensing his girlfriend slipping away, makes a gallant
attempt to win her back in a rich second-act sequence. Colley looms
ominously on the fringe, a constant threat to expose the elaborate
charade.
The growing sexual tension between Leach and Serna may be
anticipated, but it’s beautifully depicted.
The entire production succeeds because it takes some cliched
characters and situations and makes them believable.
Leach’s bachelorette apartment is nicely designed by David
Carnevale and decorated by Terri Miller Schmidt. Mitch Atkins’
lighting and director Millis’ sound designs complete an attractive
picture.
Jewish audience members will obviously get more comic satisfaction
from the various ethnic references, but “Beau Jest” is a play
everyone can enjoy.
* 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.