Playhouse delves in history for ‘Desk Set’
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Tom Titus
Remember how we all feared eventually being replaced by a computer?
No, not last week. Try about a half century ago.
When “The Desk Set” first appeared, about the time Elvis was
getting his career started, movie audiences chuckled at the antics of
Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn in the movie version. The play
itself was an early-1960s attraction at the Huntington Beach
Playhouse.
Now in its 41st season, the playhouse is delving back into
American history as well as its own. It would have started the annual
reprises with “Harvey,” the theater’s very first production from
1963, last season, but the pros at the Laguna Playhouse beat the
community group to the rights for Mary Chase’s whimsical farce.
This season, the playhouse is opting for a nostalgic reprise of
William Marchant’s business office comedy, in which mayhem develops
when a male efficiency expert is sent to computerize a TV network’s
predominantly female reference department.
The Huntington Beach production, which opens Friday, has gone
through no fewer than three pairs of directorial hands. Veteran
playhouse actor-director Phil de Barros (whose service with the
theater stretches almost back to the first “Desk Set”) cast the show,
then turned the reins over to James W. Gruessing Jr.
Gruessing blocked the show and supervised the technical aspects,
but -- since he’s also committed to several other projects --
Michelle Calhoun-Fitts was brought in two weeks into rehearsals to
assist with the daily directing duties.
“I work with the actors on character development and ‘business,’
as well as work with the costume designer, stage manager and prop
manger,” Calhoun-Fitts explained. “The result is a great symbiotic
and collaborative working relationship.”
Answering the obvious question, Calhoun-Fitts remarked: “Yes, we
are keeping the play in its original setting of the late 1950s. Both
the basic main plot (fear of computer domination and change) and the
subplot (Bunny’s noncommittal boyfriend) still ring true today.
“There may be some small references that hail back to a different
era,” she noted, “but I personally feel that keeping it in its
original format will allow the play to be more accessible to the
Huntington Beach Playhouse’s audience. The quick wit, charming
characters and fast-paced story line will definitely appeal to both
our younger and our more mature patrons.”
Calhoun-Fitts points out that the play has a predominantly female
cast. “The women are intelligent, attractive, strong, funny and
endearing,” she says. “Each character represents women most of us
know -- our friends, our co-workers, or even our family.”
“The Desk Set” will be on stage for three weekends, through June
13, at the playhouse’s Library Theater at the Central Library
facility, 7111 Talbert Ave., Huntington Beach. Performances will be
given Thursdays and Fridays at 8 p.m., Saturdays at 3 and 8, Sundays
at 2 and 7, with ticket information available at (714) 375-0696.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Independent.
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