TOM TITUS -- Theater Review
If you don’t know much about art, but you know what you don’t like,
you’re going to love “Art” at South Coast Repertory.
Yasmina Reza’s biting commentary on culture and friendship --
translated from the French but undoubtedly losing few, if any, laughs in
the process -- is a brief but uproarious venture. At 90 minutes without
intermission, it may well be the funniest show you’ve seen all year, and
the year’s nearly extinct.
“Art” involves three friends -- a highbrow, a lowbrow and a
middlebrow, who serves as involuntary arbitrator. The sophisticate
purchases a huge painting, for a huge sum, that appears to the untrained,
or maybe even the trained, eye to be entirely white. He enlists his
friends’ opinions on his investment.
Those opinions touch the match to a verbal conflagration, which
quickly becomes a forest fire. Under the pinpoint direction of Mark
Rucker, the play steadily increases in outlandish hilarity, threatening
irreparable damage to the camaraderie of its characters.
“Art” is so well constructed that it’s difficult to imagine it not
succeeding under any circumstances. But in the hands of the three superb
actors on the SCR Mainstage, it’s, well, a work of art.
The subtle, and not so subtle, zingers come flying thick and fast,
creating an atmosphere of virtual nonstop hilarity.
Stephen Markle seethes with a sense of self-righteous superiority as
the dermatologist who’s bought the white-on-white painting. His
indignation at its reception is skillfully rendered, creating a climate
of intellectual tension that carries the production into uncharted waters
that may well engulf a friendship.
His severest critic is portrayed, in the richest performance of the
evening, by John de Lancie, who cuts through the cerebral clutter to
register his opinion repeatedly with a four-letter word unprintable in a
family newspaper. De Lancie functions as the motor of the production,
revving up the dissent and keeping it humming uproariously. His sharp,
sarcastic wit is a lethal weapon.
The erstwhile referee, cast in an uncomfortable role by both of the
others, is splendidly enacted by Steven Culp (son of the “I Spy” star),
who has problems of his own and hardly needs this controversy. Culp
engages the audience with a crackling monologue on the family problems
related to his impending marriage. It rambles on for a funny 10 minutes
as the others feign terminal boredom.
Singly, the “Art” cast is terrific. Together, they thrust and parry
with a finely honed comic vengeance that brings most of the audience to
its feet at the curtain. It’s a show that makes you yearn to see it again
and catch what you may have missed during the extended episodes of
laughter.
The high comedy is carried out against an imposing, oversized backdrop
by scenic designer Tony Fanning that resembles a museum more than a
private residence. It might dwarf a cast possessed of less-dynamic
interpretive skills.
No matter your opinions on modern art, or even the painting in
question at SCR, this work of “Art” should be immensely appreciated.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
FYI
* WHAT: “Art”
* WHERE: South Coast Repertory, 650 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa
* WHEN: Tuesdays through Fridays at 8 p.m., Saturdays at 2:30 and 8
p.m., and Sundays at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. until Nov. 19
* COST: $28 to $49
* CALL: (714) 708-5555
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