‘SCR encores ‘Intimate’
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Tom Titus
If at first you do succeed, why not try again anyway?
That was the feeling at South Coast Repertory when the company
scheduled an encore production of Alan Ayckbourn’s comedy “Intimate
Exchanges,” opening next weekend on the theater’s Julianne Argyros
Stage after a week of previews beginning Sunday.
SCR first mounted the comic labyrinth of a play 10 years ago with
Richard Doyle and Kandis Chappell comprising the cast. Both are
returning for the encore under the direction of Martin Benson, one of
the company’s two founding directors. Among them, Doyle, Benson and
Chappell have amassed 13 awards from the Los Angeles Drama Critics
Circle.
One might assume they would need all that talent and experience to
negotiate their way through Ayckbourn’s farcical work, familiar as it
might be for them. The playwright describes it as “a play in four
acts with 16 possible variations.”
“Intimate Exchanges,” set in a small English village, examines the
lives and relationships of six men and five women -- all played by
the same two performers -- and the course their lives may have taken
had different choices been made at certain times.
As written, there are 30 scenes, 11 characters and approximately
16 hours of dialogue. But don’t worry about getting home after
midnight -- SCR will present only one of the 16 potential outcomes.
However, the show still will require Chappell and Doyle to create a
half-dozen distinct characters.
“It’s always a joy to revisit Ayckbourn, because it’s a lot of
fun,” Doyle said. “This one is special because it was my first time
playing opposite Kandis and my first real Ayckbourn outing, and it
turned out very well.”
That first venture was played out on the old Second Stage, with
audience on three sides.
“There are elements we won’t have to worry about this time because
we’re working on a proscenium stage,” he said. “Also, it’s more
farcical, with more comedic elements than first time, more bizarre
situations.”
Chappell, who’s actually doing the play for the third time, said,
“I must say that the comfort level in the room (with Doyle and
Benson) is terrific. We have a really good, comfortable relationship,
which is nice.
“It’s been an interesting process,” she said. “I remember certain
things that worked, but not why they worked. It’s a very complicated
play, and an incredibly busy show with props. I’ve been wondering,
‘Why don’t I write down what I’m doing in case I do it again?’ When
each of us runs offstage, we should have a list of what we do next.”
“This version has more turnarounds than the original,” Doyle
agreed. “We play three characters at a time, changing backstage. It’s
a lot of work, but a lot of fun.”
Another reason for the play’s difficulty, Chappell said, is that
Ayckbourn writes specifically English rhythms. “Learning the lines is
so difficult because of the Englishness of them,” she said. “He uses
slightly different words than we would use.”
Both Doyle and Chappell are well versed in the Ayckbourn style.
Doyle was featured in last season’s “Relatively Speaking” and played
the title role in “Man of the Moment,” while Chappell had the title
role in “Woman in Mind” and headed the cast of “How the Other Half
Loves,” all performed on the Costa Mesa stage.
Each has been honored in this column’s year-end “man and woman of
the year in theater” tribute (as has director Benson, back in 1976),
and both were seen in the current season-opening production of “The
Last Night of Ballyhoo.” Their individual credits at SCR alone are
somewhat staggering since Doyle has been around virtually since day
one in the mid-1960s and Chappell has performed regularly there over
the past two decades.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Fridays.
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