‘Mr. Marmalade’ isn’t kid stuff
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Tom Titus
South Coast Repertory’s latest world premiere -- “Mr. Marmalade” by
its youngest produced playwright, Noah Haidle, 25 -- may revolve
around the adventures of a 4-year-old girl, but it would be
inadvisable to take any youngster under the age of 16 to see it. Kid
stuff, it ain’t.
Haidle’s fertile imagination has produced a world in which a
little girl has an imaginary playmate, but underneath this bogus
character’s polished Dr. Phil exterior he’s got all the charm and
consideration of Charles Manson on a really bad day.
Reality and fantasy collide and intertwine with throat-catching
regularity in this bizarre day in the life of little Lucy, who
conjures up the title character as a brusque, briefcase-carrying
businessman with little time for his clever creator. Since Lucy lives
with her divorced mother, one must assume she drew on her departed
father as a role model for her imaginary companion.
If so, Dad must really have been hell on wheels. Haidle’s Mr.
Marmalade has more character shifts than Jennifer Garner on “Alias”
-- in one scene, he’s the epitome of rectitude; in the next, he’s a
foul-mouthed SOB who carries porno books, sex toys and a blow-up doll
in his briefcase.
Lucy also has another friend, this one real. Five-year-old Larry
drops by to play “doctor” and gets a thorough examination in a scene
that will elicit more than a few gasps from the audience. There’s a
message here, involving learning to separate reality from fantasy,
but it’s nearly lost in all the black comedy Haidle takes a perverse
delight in churning out.
Eliza Pryor Nagel excels as the precocious Lucy. A grown actress
with a union card, Nagel succeeds in luring her audience into this
edgy pretense and expressing a plethora of conflicting emotions over
the course of this roller-coaster saga. If her “playing doctor” scene
doesn’t shock the audience, the second-act bit involving her “baby”
certainly will. Playgoers must remember that this is all a fantasy
created by a child’s mind.
The title role of the half-hero, half-heel mythical man is
performed with spirit and relish by Glen Fleshler, whose dominating
stage presence is often reassuring but more often frightening. And
the method by which Lucy chooses to remove him from her life is
equally unsettling.
Guilford Adams, also an adult, is quite credible as the 5-year-old
playmate who joins into the spirit of the adventure with caution at
first, then overly solicitous as he prepares a “banquet” of chips,
candy and other junk food he’s managed to swipe from the neighborhood
market.
Heidi Dippold takes on three characters, all well defined. She’s
quite believable as Lucy’s single mother who has overnight
boyfriends, teenage raunchy as the girl’s baby-sitter and justly
goofy in the cameo of a sunflower (yes, a sunflower, who comes to
dinner accompanied by a cactus in the play’s most egregious example
of imagination run amok).
Another figment of Lucy’s imagination, this one quite engaging, is
Bradley, Mr. Marmalade’s personal assistant. Marc Victor gives this
character a charm and sophistication beyond Lucy’s years. Larry Bates
completes the cast in roles as the sitter’s boyfriend and the
aforementioned cactus.
Ethan McSweeney directs this junior Twilight Zone of a play with
all the proper imagination and flourish it requires. Michael Roth’s
original music provides a suitable backdrop, along with Rachel
Hauck’s large living room setting and Angela Balogh Calin’s colorful
costumes.
“Mr. Marmalade” marks its author, who’s still pursuing his muse at
Julliard, as a name to watch in the future. Particularly since he
counts among his mentors veteran playwright Christopher Durang, who’s
raised the bar for bizarre theater over the past few decades.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Fridays.
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