THEATER REVIEW
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Tom Titus
How do you put on a comedy centered on two furriers and their clients
in this day and age when donning coats from material formerly occupied by
animals borders on social felony? Simple -- just set it in 1936, when fur
coats were not only accepted but highly coveted.
The subject matter might explain why the Ray Cooney-John Chapman
comedy “Not Now, Darling” hasn’t surfaced locally in three decades. But
director Terri Miller Schmidt is playing it as a period piece at the
Newport Theatre Arts Center, and even the most anti-fur activist should
get a chuckle out of it, if not an outright belly laugh.
“Not Now, Darling” is one of those typical British sex farces so
popular in the 1970s, in which libidinous gents and nubile young ladies
engage in various adventures that involve the female performers getting
down to their scanties as the male members engage in a series of
cover-ups -- of their chicanery, not, rest assured, of the actresses.
What distinguishes this particular piece is the rapid-fire double and
triple entendre, which makes the dialogue nearly as funny as the action.
At Newport, all concerned are heavily involved in the merriment, but the
two chaps in the center are pushing all the comedy buttons.
Howard Patterson and David Colley play partners who operate an upscale
London fur salon, and they could have been models for Neil Simon’s “Odd
Couple.” Patterson’s character is ultraconservative and terrified of any
whiff of scandal, while Colley is a predatory prowler who resembles an
overly stimulated Ernie Kovacs, using a prized mink to lure a young lady
into his boudoir.
Both Colley and his intended conquest (Kerri Vickers) are married,
which presents another set of problems, particularly when the defiant
lady sheds her garments and her suspicious husband (Walter DuRant), who’s
buying a fur for his own mistress (Juliette Finch), arrives.
Patterson, meanwhile, strives to keep everything aboveboard, which
means tossing the ladies’ clothes out the window periodically and
generally impersonating an agitated Arthur Treacher, at which he is
excellent.
His interaction with the partners’ comely secretary (Gigi Fusco
Meese), who fancies him for reasons unexplained by the playwrights, is
particularly well-fashioned.
Colley’s spouse (Sherryl Wynne) returns disastrously early from a
trip, further complicating the plot, while a wealthy client (Tony Grande)
and his exasperated wife (Lorie Verwiel-Mumper) appear alternately in
search of one another, and Finch’s jealous husband (Christopher Anzalone)
adds an ominous seasoning to the mixture. Grande makes the most of his
brief stage time with some pungently underplayed comedy, but Wynne’s
choice of a cutesy speech pattern often is annoying.
“Not Now, Darling” may not be up to the high comic velocity of English
farce set by such plays as “Noises Off,” but it’s brimming with chuckles
nevertheless. Bolstering the show’s appeal are the attractive period
costumes from TLC Costume Design and the furriers’ workplace, designed by
Helen Fearon and Shannon Shute, with set dressing by the director.
There’s much more coming off than going on in “Not Now, Darling,”
which is back with us after a much-too-long absence. This is comedy for
the pure fun of it.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
FYI
* WHAT: “Not Now, Darling”
* WHERE: Newport Theatre Arts Center, 2501 Cliff Drive, Newport Beach
* WHEN: 8 p.m. Thursdays through Saturdays, 2:30 p.m. Sundays until
Dec. 16
* COST: $13
* PHONE (949) 631-0288
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