TOM TITUS -- Theater
Comedy, as Steve Martin once observed, isn’t pretty. The four one-act
plays in Orange Coast College Repertory Theater’s annual Comedy Festival
-- including one by Martin himself -- certainly bear out the
comedian-playwright’s assertion.
They may not be pretty, but at least three of the four offerings,
ranging from snide to satiric to derivative, are nevertheless quite
effective. The fourth is strictly an exercise in sustained ridicule.
The classiest of the quartet is Martin’s “Wasp,” a scathing satire
focusing on a 1950s nuclear family approaching meltdown. Director Jessica
Hutchinson zeros in on the play’s razor-edged sendups, adding some
well-chosen period music to bridge the five scenes.
Travis Woods is excellent as the dad who expounds from his dining room
pulpit, oblivious to his family’s interjections. Heather Layton’s mother
is a splendid study in plastic-faced frustration, while the kids (Jessica
Seely and Sean Hesketh) function in their own worlds, Seely as a bratty
teen and Hesketh exploring imaginary worlds. Seely’s choir session,
veering in and out of reality, is beautifully delivered.
OCC’s resident student playwright, Chris Secor, contributes two
originals in the festival. The first, entitled “Theater,” strikes a blow
for authors who cringe under the control of censors and investors. As the
playwright (Ryan Gray) seethes, artistic directors Secor and Casey
Colliflower water down his script and money man Frank Miyashiro (who also
directs) completes the dilution process until nothing is left but
mindless repetition.
More ambitious is Secor’s “Life After Beth,” in which five young
campers find their friendships coming apart at the seams on an outing
where Murphy’s Law is strictly enforced. The gimmick here is it’s all in
rhymed couplets, Shakespearean style, inspired, most likely, by “A
Midsummer Night’s Dream.”Secor opens the show by reading a poetic saga,
then the cast continues to speak in verse.
Secor’s tale, which he also directs, is rambling and often sophomoric,
but his chosen format is tricky and a challenge to sustain.
Secor, Colliflower, Lauren Mora, Phi Le and Rebecca Muhleman comprise
a contentious crop of campers, while Miyashiro (garbed as a bear) and
Erin Holt (as a forest spirit with an attitude) spice up the procedure.
Finally, playwright Christopher Durang has created some fine caustic
comedies over the past few decades. So why do students invariably opt for
“Naomi in the Living Room,” an exercise in overstatement that should be
confined -- if disinterred at all -- to acting classes?
Isabella Melo launches a bombastic tirade to reduce son and
daughter-in-law Angel Correa and Nancy Troia to dust in this egregiously
over-the-top piece directed by Ramsey Schlissel.
The Comedy Festival is an ideal place for student actors and directors
to try out their wings, and some invariably succeed to a greater extent
than others. Directors Hutchison and Secor win high marks for their
efforts, along with actors Woods, Seely and Muhleman.
All the performers are given due appreciation, save for the mouse that
scurried across the stage floor during Friday’s “Theater” presentation,
then realized he was in the wrong show. The festival concludes this
weekend.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
FYI
WHAT: OCC Repertory Comedy Festival
WHERE: Studio Theater, Orange Coast College, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa
WHEN: Closing performances 8 p.m. today through Saturday, 2 and 7 p.m.
Sunday
COST: $6
TICKETS: (714) 432-5640, Ext. 1
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