French funfest at SCR
- Share via
Tom Titus
Back in South Coast Repertory’s formative years, the mid-1960s,
period comedies from the 16th or 17th centuries often came served
with a flourish of decidedly 20th century humor, both increasing
readings on the laugh meter and reaching out with the implements
necessary to hook a modern audience.
We haven’t seen much of that sort of time-bending humor since SCR
took up residence in its fancy new digs some 25 years ago, but the
current production of John Strand’s “Lovers and Executioners” on the
company’s Julianne Argyros Stage certainly should push longtime
audience members’ nostalgia buttons.
The comedy -- based on a 1660s-era play by the French author
Montfleury -- certainly doesn’t require the extra touches (blue
jeans, a fishing pole, a bag of chips, etc.), but their presence
defines the show as one in which anything can happen and probably
will, including an onstage hanging -- but remember, this is first and
foremost a comedy.
Director Bill Rauch, leading his first SCR main stage production,
pulls out all the stops in this frenetic French farce where genders
are bent, “dead” characters recover and swords are drawn at the drop
of a chapeau. Moliere, Montfleury’s contemporary and rival, might
have panned it, but SCR audiences should thoroughly enjoy Strand’s
more modern and raucously funny version.
Once the curtain rises, “Lovers and Executioners” appears to be
anything but a comedy. A jealous businessman (David Kelly), believing
himself to be cuckolded, drops his wife (Libby West) on a small,
deserted island to presumably perish for her alleged misdeeds. West’s
character could teach those TV survivors a thing or two -- she
returns, disguised as a man, and proceeds to wreak frightening
vengeance.
West is positively luminous in the role. She scores both
comically, as she’s forced into a duel with a skilled Spanish
swordsman, and dramatically, as -- having won a judicial appointment
-- she metes out the harshest of penalties to her misguided husband.
Kelly agonizes wonderfully in the latter assignment, writhing under
the shadow of the gallows after having established his character as
large and in charge.
His intended second wife, played by Ruth Livier, is a coquettish
lass who must stave off the aforementioned Spaniard while pursuing an
assignation with West’s male-guised character. Julian Acosta takes
the conquistador’s role with a hot-blooded flourish and skewers the
French with the well-received line: “This would never happen in
Spain.”
As usual in such farcical proceedings, the servants wind up with
some of the best moments. Christopher Liam Moore, in particular,
revels in the tide-turning situation as Kelly’s ill-treated valet.
Susan Dalian is sexy and spunky as Livier’s servant, while Andrew
Borba is a staunch confidant to the transformed West, whose words of
caution generally go unheeded.
The action is played out against the backdrop of an elaborate
garden setting by Lynn K. Jeffries, including a concrete Cupid who
urinates, and stops urinating, on cue. Shigeru Yaji’s costumes are
eye-catching (especially a hot 21st century outfit donned by Kelly,
mistakenly dressing to impress). Fight choreographer Daniel R. Forcey
has found plenty of work in a series of slapstick swordplay.
“Lovers and Executioners” is a morality play disguised in wild
comic trappings, and Rauch’s production reaps gales of laughter
between its moments of deadly seriousness. Seldom have the French
been quite this funny.
* 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.