TOM TITUS -- THEATER REVIEW
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Picture a Moliere comedy performed with all the stops out by the Marx
Brothers on a caffeine overload and you’ve got a pretty close
approximation of “Scapino,” the current production at Vanguard University
in Costa Mesa.
“Scapino,” adapted from Moliere’s “Scapin” by Frank Dunlop and Jim
Dale in the 1960s, has its roots in the commedia dell’arte style of the
1600s. What bubbles to the surface in director Mitch Teemley’s Vanguard
production is beyond wild and crazy.
Already the epitome of farcical theater, “Scapino” receives a few
extra helpings of physical comedy from Teemley and his inventive Vanguard
troupe, which takes the Italian theme of the show and runs with it. The
college’s Lyceum Theater becomes a loud and boisterous Italian
restaurant, where the overbearing head waitress (Bonnie Abraham) and her
servile crew pass out bread and take imaginary orders before the stage
lights come up.
Once the show gets under way, the stage belongs to Sunny Peabody in
the title role of a mischievous, mercenary servant who not only
physically resembles a youthful Jim Carrey but achieves, and often
surpasses, Carrey’s level of inspired wackiness. This same student, who
staged the brilliantly riveting “Hamlet” last year, takes a 180-degree
turn to deliver a seminar in farcical theater.
Peabody’s Scapino is recruited to remedy the romantic dilemma of his
master, Octavio (nerdily enacted by Adam Eugene Hurst) and, while he’s at
it, to do likewise for another similarly inflicted fellow (a pugnacious
Brandon Tyra). And again, while he’s at it, why not deflate a pair of
stuffed shirts just for the pure heck of it?
With an enthusiastic assist from his clever comrade (an energetic
Christa Jenewein), Scapino targets the old maidish Giacinta (Emily Rose)
and the pompous Geronte (Tim Larson), particularly Geronte, who’s stuffed
in a sack and repeatedly beaten to a pulp with a sausage.
Misty Groseth and Heaven Joy Peabody portray the young ladies waiting
for Scapino to set things right, but their waiting also is part of the
fun -- especially Heaven Peabody’s sensuous Gypsy characterization. Suzee
Adams gets in a few choice comic licks as a street bum scooping up the
leftover goodies, while Ronni Hamilton adds a confused, displaced nurse
to the mixture.
The small thrust stage of Vanguard’s Lyceum Theater is magnified by
myriad steps and canal effects from set designer Tim Mueller. Yes, this
is Naples, not Venice, but that’s no reason not to have a working gondola
in this frenetic farce, which also borrows from “Gilligan’s Island” and
“Airplane,” among other popular sources.
Vanguard’s “Scapino” goes the extra comic mile with ample audience
involvement and inspired slapstick, the lion’s share of which is fired at
a machine gun pace by Sunny Peabody. This is a young man destined for big
things in the business if he so chooses.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
FYI
WHAT: “Scapino”
WHERE: Vanguard University, 55 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa
WHEN: 8 p.m. Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday, and 8 p.m. April 20.
COST: $10
PHONE : (714) 668-6145
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