Shakespeare’s ‘Two Gentlemen’ woo in the 1950s at SCR
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Tom Titus
To fully appreciate a Shakespearean comedy, one must buy into two
assumptions -- that treachery among allies, no matter how guileful,
may ultimately be forgiven, and that a young woman may render herself
unrecognizable to her beloved simply by altering her hairstyle.
Accept these premises, and you should enjoy “Two Gentlemen of
Verona,” South Coast Repertory’s latest production, in which the
“Verona” of the title is situated somewhere in middle America of the
1950s. That’s established at the outset, as the actors perform
against the backdrop of a gigantic billboard advertising milk “from
Verona cows.”
“Two Gentlemen” may not be among Shakespeare’s greatest hits, but
under the creative direction of Mark Rucker -- who revisualized “The
Taming of the Shrew” and “Much Ado About Nothing” for SCR audiences
-- it’s a rich chunk of eye candy. Energy and imagination may paper
over innumerable structural flaws, and these elements are present at
SCR in abundance.
Of the gentlemen in the title, only one actually fits that
description -- the other is a cad who turns his back on his own
sweetheart to secure the heart of his buddy’s. This is no easy task,
since her nobleman father prefers a third suitor and carries a lot of
weight in the swinging metropolis of Milan.
Scott Soren excels as the ungentlemanly gent, Proteus, whose bonds
with best pal Valentine (Gregory Crane) dissolve when he spies
Valentine’s sweetie Silvia (Nealy Glenn). Nevermind that his own
hometown squeeze (Jennifer Elise Cox) is something of a fox in her
own right.
Rather than dump the rascal, as most ladies in the ‘50s -- or,
probably, Shakespeare’s time as well -- would do, Cox dutifully takes
matters into her own hands by posing as a man (the hairdo change) and
discovering Proteus’ duplicity for herself. But not until after the
plot takes several circuitous turns, including the appearance of a
Hell’s Angels type of desert outlaw band that enlivens the
proceedings immeasurably.
There are, of course, the numskull servants -- Daniel T. Parker
and Travis Vaden -- whose contributions could well be trimmed in the
interest of brevity (it being the soul of wit). Parker plays an
overweight, enthusiastic dullard while Vaden brings along his docile
dog to back up his Gomer Pyle-esque performance.
One of the strongest figures onstage is Preston Maybank as the
duke of Milan, Silvia’s overprotective daddy. For reasons of his own,
he prefers the ungainly Thurio (Guilford Adams) as a future
son-in-law. Adams joins Matt Demerritt and Phillip C. Vaden as
strolling musicians who back up a few numbers in which Shakespearean
dialogue becomes lyrical.
Most of SCR’s founding artists have a field day as the desert
outlaws -- Don Took, John-David Keller, Martha McFarland and Hal
Landon Jr. join Maybank and Rachel Dara Wolfe in the grungy troupe
that recruits the banished Valentine as their new leader.
Scenic designer Darcy Scanlin has created two strikingly
dissimilar locations in the provincial Verona and the swinging Milan.
Joyce Kim Lee offers some provocative costumes, especially among the
desert outlaws, while Geoff Korf’s lighting and Aram Arslanian’s
sound design complete the rousing background effects.
“Two Gentlemen of Verona,” being one of Shakespeare’s early
comedies, lacks the wit and polish of his later works, but Rucker’s
production guarantees a full evening’s entertainment.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His
reviews appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
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