Richly comic ‘Ballyhoo’ opens
- Share via
Tom Titus
Alfred Uhry may not our most prolific playwright, but he’s become one
of our most noteworthy. He wrote his first play, “Driving Miss
Daisy,” at the age of 48 -- and won the Pulitzer Prize for it. Now
this relative newcomer to his craft is the only “triple crown”
playwright -- holder of the Pulitzer, an Oscar (for the screenplay of
“Daisy”) and a Tony award.
The latter honor came for his second play, “The Last Night of
Ballyhoo,” which South Coast Repertory has chosen to inaugurate what
the company bills as its 40th season (39th locally). It’s a
handsomely mounted treatment of Jewish life in the Atlanta of 1939,
where the biggest news of the moment is the premiere of the movie
“Gone With the Wind.”
“Ballyhoo,” it must be explained, is a social whirl for young
Jewish singles culminating in a formal dance. In Uhry’s Freitag
household, it represents the last chance for Lala -- who dropped out
of college and is back living at home -- to find a suitable mate.
This romantic comedy veers off in two directions -- Lala’s (and
her sourpuss mother Boo’s) quest for a match and a similar campaign
waged by Boo’s more temperate sister Reba and her equally pleasant
daughter, appropriately called Sunny. Overseeing the often-ludicrous
proceedings is the widowed sisters’ lifelong bachelor brother Adolph,
a successful mattress manufacturer, in whose luxurious home the
ladies reside.
SCR, and director Warner Shook, have summoned three of the
company’s highest caliber talents for the adult roles. Richard Doyle
excels in the low-key, but high-laugh quotient, character of the
imperturbable Adolph, whose well-timed one-liners puncture the
familial tension repeatedly.
Kandis Chappell lends strength and determination to the icy Boo, a
sort of comic version of “The Glass Menagerie’s” Amanda Wingfield
(which she must play someday) minus the latter’s fluttery reminisces.
Her opposite-number sister Reba is delightfully interpreted by Linda
Gehringer in a performance oozing with sweetness, light and a
charming naivete.
The rebellious (for that period) Lala -- an incurable romantic who
swipes a “GWTW” publicity photo from the theater lobby -- is well
played by Blair Sams, whose Scarlett-like exit at the close of Act
One prompts a musical crescendo of the movie’s theme. Her sunnier
cousin , who’s inherited her mother’s charm but possesses her own
spunk, is nicely rendered by Debra Funkhouser.
Nathan Baesel strongly enacts a young executive in Adolph’s
company who sets his cap for Sunny, but whose intramural prejudice
regarding the “other kind” of Jews threatens his romance. Lala’s
imported beau, a flame-haired irritant named Peachy, is depicted by
Guilford Adams in the play’s only gesture of blatant comedy.
Most of the comic drama is played out in the spacious,
well-detailed interior setting created by Michael Olich. Frances
Kenny’s costumes underscore the late-’30s period nicely, and the
lighting of Tom Ruzika couldn’t be sharper.
“The Last Night of Ballyhoo” at SCR is a most enjoyable production
-- even if Uhry does submit to the traditional “breakup/makeup” plot
device late in the proceedings and the announced engagement is a bit
out of left field. Strong performances overcome these drawbacks with
the determination of, well, Scarlett O’Hara.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Fridays.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.