Just say ‘yes’
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Young Chang
When it comes to improvising, there’s something informally called the
“yes rule.” If one person says something spontaneous like, “my mother is
coming over right now, and the place is a mess,” the other half of that
dialogue should never be “no she’s not!’
“You should never say no,” said Mitch Teemley, a visiting director for
the current run of “Scapino” at Vanguard University in Costa Mesa.
Improvising “requires you to play off each other as performers. There’s a
lot of very quick, creative comedy.”
All of this comes to play in “Scapino,” written by Jim Dale and Frank
Dunlop and adapted from Moliere’s “The Adventures of Scapin.” The work is
done in the commedia dell’arte style -- an art form based on stock scenes
and characters.
The title role is a servant who helps two men struggling with a
problem -- they’re in love with women their fathers disapprove of. The
script calls for everything from oversized gunny sacks to beating someone
with a slap stick.
Cast members of the show say they enjoy the privilege and freedom of
adding their own touches to a scene. Sunny and Heaven Peabody, two
principal characters in “Scapino” who are real-life siblings and students
at Vanguard, agree that improvising allows them to interact with a crowd
that changes nightly.
“It allows me to kinda play with the audience and it’s fresh and fun
every night. It’s different every night,” Sunny Peabody said.
Susan Berkompas, chair of the Vanguard theater department, said the
style of “Scapino” creates a lot of physical action.
“This is really set-and-costume oriented because of all the
physicality that this kind of show demands,” she said.
Teemley said the play, set in an Italian oceanfront cafe, satirizes
all things Italian. A little canal runs through the middle of the set
accompanied by red striped poles typically associated with Venetian
canals (though it is set in Naples). The restaurant is run by a head
waitress who yells all the time at everyone to get everything done.
“It’s all making fun of the stereotypical Italian element,” Teemley
said.
The audience gets to make fun too. Actors sometimes jump out into the
crowd and ask their viewers to repeat what they say. The audience, at
times, also serves as part of the scenery.
“It’s sort of fun and campy, all good-humored,” Sunny Peabody said.
“Scapino” is Vanguard’s first commedia dell’arte project. Berkompas
said she was looking for a different type of show that would provide the
actors a chance to be creative almost by default, allowing them to spur
one another on.
For Heaven Peabody, who plays a vibrant gypsy, “Scapino” has done just
that.
“It’s one of those over-the-top kind of characters you can kinda have
fun with,” she said. ‘I’ve had fun just exploring that real exuberant,
fun-loving gypsy woman.”
FYI
WHAT: “Scapino”
WHEN: 8 p.m. today, 2 p.m. Sunday and 8 p.m. April 20.
WHERE: Vanguard University’s Lyceum Theater, 55 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa
COST: $10, discounts available
CALL: (714) 668-6145
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