Celebrity, scandal sheets skewered in ‘Dumb Show’
Celebrity and its illegitimate cousin, tabloid journalism, come in
for a tremendous roasting in English playwright Joe Penhall’s
scathing seriocomedy “Dumb Show,†now holding court on South Coast
Repertory’s Julianne Argyros Stage.
Penhall’s three-character treatise takes equal aim at the
swellheaded entertainer, who assumes his fame grants him carte
blanche in life, and the journalistic vultures who entrap him in this
deliciously meaty production under the tight, meticulous direction of
David Emmes.
At the outset, it appears that Barry (Micheal McShane), a sort of
latter-day Benny Hill, is about to feather his nest with a lucrative
contract dangled in front of him by two alleged bank executives
(Heidi Dippold and John Rafter Lee). However, it’s not long before
the pair is unmasked as tabloid reporters executing a carefully
concocted plot to catch the comic in a most unflattering situation.
What follows is a battle of words and wits between the troubled
showbiz legend and the crafty character assassins, bringing out the
worst in both, with neither emerging unscathed. Nevertheless, when
Barry delivers the crowning blow, so to speak, he elicits spontaneous
applause.
McShane, in a portrayal reminiscent of the late Zero Mostel, is
absolutely marvelous as the corpulent comic whose drinking problem is
exacerbated by his duplicitous guests. He balances his
stage-commanding moments as a celebrity presence with sequences of
wrenching vulnerability that rip his mask to shreds. It is a
superlative performance.
Dippold -- beautifully blond and displaying some eye-catching
cleavage and shapely legs beyond her conservative demeanor -- seems
to wrestle with her personal conscience and professional zeal, with
no clear ultimate victor. Her character probably is too principled to
be working for a scandal sheet, yet she fulfills that mission
splendidly.
Lee, on the other hand, depicts his oily, serpentine predator with
a vengeance once his own mask is removed. He is a master of control,
a bully continually grasping for the upper hand and exposed as a
cornered rat when forced to relinquish it.
The action is primarily played out against the backdrop of a
gorgeous plush hotel room setting designed by Angela Balogh Calin,
who also created the costumes. The panoramic view of the London
skyline is enhanced by curtains that flutter ever so slightly in the
evening breeze.
“Dumb Show†-- the title is ostensibly taken from the speech to
the players in “Hamlet†-- is an American premiere, and a play many
theater groups will strive to get their hands on in the future. It’s
that rare well-crafted comedy that gives its audiences myriad red
meat on which to chew.
*
It may be rushing the season a bit, but single tickets for South
Coast Repertory’s holiday productions went on sale Sunday. Tickets
range in price from $15-$49 and can be purchased by calling Ticket
Service at (714) 708-5555 or at South Coast Repertory’s website at
o7www.scr.orgf7.
Low-priced previews for “A Christmas Carol†will be available from
Nov. 26 to Dec. 1. The play runs through Dec. 24 on the Segerstrom
Stage. Low-priced previews for “La Posada Magica†will be available
December 9-15. The play runs through December 24 on the Argyros
Stage.
IF YOU GO:
* WHAT: “Dumb Showâ€
* WHERE: South Coast Repertory Julianne Argyros Theater, 655 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa
* WHEN: Friday at 7:45 p.m. and Saturday and Sunday at 2 and 7:45
p.m.
* COST: $20 - $58
* CALL: (714) 708-5555
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
run Fridays.
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