Playhouse reviving comedy of 1920s morality
Tom Titus
W. Somerset Maugham doesn’t exactly roll trippingly off the tongue
like, say, Neil Simon, among today’s theatergoers, but that doesn’t
mean his work isn’t worth revisiting. Just ask Andrew Barnicle,
artistic director of the Laguna Playhouse.
Barnicle is directing Maugham’s comedy of manners and morality,
“The Constant Wife,” as the playhouse’s next production. The play
transpires in 1927 London and is described as a “biting comedy of
manners about high society infidelity and inequality of the sexes.”
The Laguna production opens , ironically, on Valentine’s Day.
“I see Maugham as sort of a bridge between [Oscar] Wilde and
[Noel] Coward,” Barnicle declares. “The play is very funny and
clever, but not a farce, and there is some serious social commentary
being made about sexual mores and the men/women social and economic
relationship in contemporary society.”
In “The Constant Wife,” a woman who thinks she has the perfect
marriage discovers what everyone else seems to know -- that her
husband has been having a long-standing love affair. Determined not
to allow it to destroy their bond, she grows fascinated with
society’s double standard -- which leads her to explore the
possibility of tasting some forbidden fruit of her own.
“What she finally does takes her a year to concoct and is beyond
the comprehension of anyone else in the play,” Barnicle notes.
“For me, it’s been refreshing to work on a stylish drawing room
comedy,” the director adds. “We’re all told by serious critics that
we are supposed to hate these kinds of plays, but I’m not all that
angry with realism. It’s simply another conventional mode of
storytelling, and in this case very well done.”
At Laguna, the title role will be taken by Devon Raymond, who’ll
be familiar to South Coast Repertory audiences -- or at least those
who catch “A Christmas Carol” every year. Raymond has performed in 14
of the company’s 24 renditions, primarily as Mrs. Cratchit.
Kevin Symons, who scored highly in the playhouse’s “Rounding
Third” last season, is cast as the cheating husband. Broadway veteran
Mimi Cozzens will portray Raymond’s mother.
Rounding out the cast are Kirsten Potter, Catherine O’Connor,
Stephanie Cushna, Time Winters and Tom Shelton. Dwight Richard Odle
is designing the set with Julie Keen doing the period costumes and
Paulie Jenkins and David Edwards in their regular positions as
designers of lighting and sound, respectively.
Maugham, who died in 1965 at the age of 91, was a prolific
playwright and novelist who began his career as a surgeon. His
best-known works probably are the novels “Of Human Bondage” and “The
Razor’s Edge.”
“The Constant Wife,” one of his most celebrated comedies, has been
produced three times on Broadway, in 1926, 1951 (with Katherine
Cornell) and 1975 (with Ingrid Bergman). It’s had but one other
recent production locally, at the Newport Theater Arts Center a few
seasons ago.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Coastline Pilot.
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