Plenty to chew on in ‘The Dining Room’
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Tom Titus
When you’re hosting a dinner party and one of the guests can’t make
it, that just means there’s more of the goodies for everyone else.
The same holds true in the Huntington Beach Playhouse’s production
of A.R. Gurney’s “The Dining Room.”
This carefully balanced ensemble of four men and four women lost
its equilibrium just a day before opening when one actor was dropped
“due to circumstances beyond our control,” the playhouse’s
representatives explained. No problem -- the three remaining actors
simply picked up the slack.
Yes, it’s fairly obvious that some scenes employ “cheat sheets,”
but the actors are familiar enough with the characters, if not the
lines, that the show comes off quite effectively. Director Jack
Messenger has fashioned a richly flavorful production from Gurney’s
often backhanded tribute to the East Coast WASP culture and its
traditions centering around the formal eating area.
“The Dining Room” is a series of 18 scenes with (in this case)
seven actors assuming some 60 characterizations, most calculated to
touch traditionalist nerves. In almost every case, the characters are
well-to- do and employ servants, which may seem somewhat
anachronistic to modern California audiences, but which suits the
purpose of Gurney’s gentle jabs.
Space hardly permits discussion of all 18 scenes, but highlights
abound. In an early, stiffly formal breakfast sequence, a father
(pinch-hitter Michael J. Tranchida) lectures his children (Kyra
Kiener and Ron Cohen) on proper demeanor at the dining table as the
maid (Rose London) patiently a serves the meal. Later, London and
Cohen play a heart-tugging scene as she explains why she’s leaving
and he begs her to stay on.
A particularly well-fashioned scene involves a birthday party for
a giggly young girl (Kyra Kiener) as her mother (Karen McDaniel) and
the father of one of the boys (James J. Ross) conduct a little
surreptitious scene on the side. Adultery also raises its head in a
tense sequence when McDaniel and Ross, playing other characters, are
interrupted by her testy son’s (Cohen) unexpected arrival from
college.
One of the more hilarious moments in the show transpires under the
table as a carpenter (Ross) and a divorcee (Kiener) conduct a steamy
first encounter. Kiener and AmyJo Steele are particularly laudable in
a scene playing teenagers tippling while their parents are away.
Cohen inherits one of the play’s better scenes as an old man
discussing, chapter and verse, his funeral arrangements with his
uncomfortable son (Tranchida). And Tranchida has his best moment as a
college student doing a term paper on the outdated WASP traditions of
his aunt (London), who tosses out the best closing line of the night.
London’s finest moment comes in the first act’s final scene as an
elderly, confused woman at her birthday party who can’t recognize her
family or guests. In another well-staged sequence, Ross rages over a
slur against his brother as his family awaits a holiday dinner that
apparently never will be served.
That the show comes off so well in its missing-man formation is a
tribute to the cohesion of the Huntington Beach cast and Messenger’s
guidance. “The Dining Room” serves up appetizing theater for just
about every taste.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Independent.
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