Something hard to chide
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Tom Titus
If asked to pick between watching a brilliant play with mediocre
actors or a mediocre play brilliantly performed, chances are you’d
opt for the latter.
“Something to Hide,” the latest production at the Newport Theater
Arts Center, certainly doesn’t rank among the stellar examples of
English literature, but with the cast director Terri Miller Schmidt
has assembled, it’s a first-rate suspense thriller. Plus, it has the
advantage of not having been performed incessantly like others in the
genre (think “The Mousetrap” or “Ten Little Indians,” even
“Deathtrap”), thus audiences most likely will be viewing the play for
the first time.
This in itself is somewhat on the head-scratching side, since
Leslie Sands wrote the play back in 1959, and it’s been tucked in the
back drawer of a certain play-leasing service ever since. Schmidt
literally had the script pulled out of a cubbyhole and the dust blown
off it during her recent quest for a “different” mystery play.
As performed on the arts center stage, in its original late-’50s
period, “Something to Hide” is intriguing primarily because it’s
unfamiliar. A roguish author of romance novels (Ken La Salle) has
married an older woman (Christi Sweeney), who finances his venture
while secretly wooing a seductive younger woman (Stephanie Schulz) at
his woodsy retreat. A fortuitous accident then turns into a potential
murder before the last playgoer is barely seated.
From that point, the stage belongs to the distraught Sweeney,
terror-stricken at the thought of her culpability and turning in a
high-gloss portrayal that, itself, is worth the price of admission.
It’s a tremendously demanding assignment, requiring dizzying
emotional swings, and Sweeney grabs it by the throat in one of the
finest performances local community theater has witnessed in many
moons.
Balancing her inner hysteria, which she strives valiantly to keep
beneath the surface, is the cunning, folksy demeanor of the local
police inspector, superbly rendered by Robert Kokol. Kokol’s
character is a familiar one -- think Columbo on the other side of the
pond -- but this veteran actor has the disarming craftiness down to a
science, particularly during a sequence in which his mind supposedly
is primarily occupied with a recalcitrant pipe.
As the scheming, duplicitous writer, La Salle projects an almost
melodramatic charm. His meticulous efforts to cover his tracks (not
all of which are successful) contribute to a provocative character
playgoers will love to hate. La Salle’s shifty eyes, under his
well-oiled ‘50s hairstyle, signal a man with his back to the wall,
yet determined to prevail.
Character roles -- those of the local gentry who may or may not be
involved in the chicanery -- are a staple of nearly every English
whodunit. In “Something to Hide,” there are two such types, a
meddlesome old lady, beautifully overdone by Anne Rudd, and the local
service station mechanic, offered with excited avarice by Robert P.
Purcell.
Schulz, who is being understudied by Michelle Calhoun-Fitts,
deliciously plays La Salle’s fetching mistress, who makes a lasting
impression in a brief amount of stage time. Claire Averill is a tart
treat as the obligatory maid.
The setting, a rustic cabin described as a converted tollhouse, is
nicely designed by Eckmann Stage and Technical with Schmidt supplying
the well-chosen appurtenances. Ron Wyand has come up with a haunting
musical background to link the play’s five scenes, while Mitch
Atkins’ lighting also is quite effective.
“Something to Hide” is quite more enjoyable than it probably
should be, principally because of its sterling cast, taut direction
-- and the fact that it’s most likely never been seen before. These
elements combine for a most entertaining evening.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Fridays.
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