‘20 Little Indians’ hit local stages
Tom Titus
There is, as they say, a first time for everything.
In nearly four decades of chronicling the local theater scene,
I’ve often encountered the same play being presented by two or more
different theater groups during the same season.
Once, a few years ago, I sat through three productions of “Steel
Magnolias” in a six-week period (one I was obliged to review, the
other two, outside the paper’s coverage area, featured a good friend
and a good daughter in the respective casts, also demanding my
attention.)
Never, however, in my experience has there been an occasion to
review the same play opening the same weekend at two different local
theaters.
That’s what’s on tap this weekend with what I like to refer to as
“20 Little Indians.”
Both the Huntington Beach Playhouse and the Costa Mesa Civic
Playhouse decided that Agatha Christie’s 1940s-era mystery thriller
“Ten Little Indians” would be an ideal play to present over the
Halloween period. Neither, of course, consulted the other; why would
they?
The result is that the Huntington Beach version has its grand
opening tonight, and I’ll be viewing it for the Huntington Beach
Independent. Costa Mesa’s will be Saturday, and will be reviewed in
the Independent’s sister paper, the Daily Pilot, next week. As
General Custer once said, “Where did all those bleeping Indians come
from?”
Actually, there are no native Americans in Christie’s whodunit.
The title comes from a musical ditty, much like her play “The
Mousetrap” found its titular reference in the song “Three Blind
Mice.”
The plot is a familiar one, lampooned on both stage and screen in
recent years (“Murder by Death,” “Something’s Afoot,” etc.). Ten
people, strangers to one another, are invited to spend an evening on
a fog-shrouded island cut off from civilization, and one by one, they
start expiring.
Who’ll be the last one standing? Well, for that answer, you’ll
have to see the show -- either in Costa Mesa or Huntington Beach.
Jack Messenger, who’s directing the local version, naturally hopes
you’ll check out the Huntington Beach Playhouse.
“I’m excited to do this piece because it’s been considered a
classic Agatha Christie ‘whodunit’ since the beginning of time, it
seems,” Messenger commented. “ Outside of ‘The Mousetrap,’ which is
the longest-running play in the history of London’s West End theater
district, ‘Ten Little Indians’ is considered her penultimate work.”
Messenger is all too aware of the problems presented by an
American cast attempting English accepts. Which is why he’s changing
the location of the play from Devon, England, to an island off the
coast of British Columbia.
“This way, I can still keep the ‘British’ flavor of the show
without having the audience strain to the distraction of ‘faux’
British accents.
“Canadians, as we know, still belong to the dominion and still are
very British in their attitudes and language usage,” said Messenger,
who lived in Canada for a good part of his life. “By setting the
locale to coastal British Columbia, I can get the actors to ‘relax’
with a normal accent.”
As for the time period, Messenger is keeping the play in its
original late ‘30s-early ‘40s atmosphere with ominous lighting to add
richness to the story. The walls of the drawing room setting will be
painted “blood red.”
“We hope to have as full a sound production as possible, replete
with the appropriate boat horns, seagulls, wind and rain, etc.,”
Messenger said. “Additionally, I’m a big believer in music as
‘dressing’ to a show. I want to fill the audience’s ears [and thus,
their perceptions] with music that will build the requisite tension
and sense of foreboding atmosphere.”
Messenger is aware that his “10 Little Indians” isn’t the only one
hitting the boards this weekend.
“I hope it just builds more interest for both shows,” he said. “We
could use as much support and interest in local theater as we can
get.”
“10 Little Indians” opens Friday for three weekends at the
playhouse’s Library Theater in the city’s Central Library complex,
7111 Talbert Ave., Huntington Beach. Tickets may be reserved by
calling the box office at (714) 375-0696.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Independent.
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