TOM TITUS -- Theater Review
One test of a fine comedy is its ability to induce chuckles and
guffaws after repeated viewings. In this regard, Neil Simon’s “Rumors”
ranks in the upper echelon.
The production now on stage at the Newport Theater Arts Center is the
fourth -- but undoubtedly not the last -- produced in this area. It’s
also one of the best, exhibiting true ensemble excellence, and it is
hands down the funniest show of the year on a local community theater
stage.
Director Jack Millis has assembled a top-notch cast for this frenetic
farce, in which Simon tops his “Odd Couple,” “Plaza Suite” or anything
else in his bulging 40-year repertoire for sheer unadulterated hilarity.
And Millis gets the most out of every outlandish situation, building
sight gags on top of punch lines as the show whistles along at a pace
seldom achieved in community theater comedy.
Simon’s premise is an engaging one -- four couples, dressed to the
nines, assemble for the anniversary party of a fifth pair, whom we never
see but who are seldom out of our thoughts. The absent husband has taken
a bullet in the ear and is upstairs under sedation, the wife has
disappeared and the eight guests pile fabrication upon prevarication as
they attempt to put a positive spin on the strange situation, with all
the effect of rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic.
The cast is uniformly excellent, but cream rises to the top, and in
this case the cream is the duo of David Colley and Adriana Sanchez, who
arrive in a state of disrepair, having crunched his new car along with
the anniversary present, a set of Waterford crystal.
Colley, who must spend the entire play with his neck crookedin a
whiplash-induced state, simmers in inadequately controlled rage,
finishing off the play with a hilariously formulated, seat-of-the-pants
monologue. Sanchez registers high on the comical scale with her
deer-in-the-headlights reactions. She doesn’t even get to sing, something
she does better than anyone in local theater.
Chaney Cramer, whose character has quit smoking and is dying for a
nicotine fix, sparkles with nervous anxiety. Her husband, skillfully
enacted by Thom Gilbert, has been too close to a gunshot and suffers from
near-deafness throughout most of the action.
Adding some more comically physical discomfort to the mix are Jillary
Gordon as a cooking show hostess with a painfully sore back and her
klutzy psychiatrist husband, taking a group therapy call offstage with
burned fingers, richly enacted by Jay Cramer.
Just when we think the situation couldn’t get any more strained, along
comes Mike Jensen as a preening politician and Lorianne Hill as his
tightly wound wife, concocting endless scenarios involving her husband’s
infidelity. Jensen excels as a smooth spin doctor, while Hill brings down
the house with her steely mannerisms and overtly enacted seduction
attempts.
The situation must be resolved, which is why Simon dispatches a pair
of police officers to the scene. Jack Rule effectively portrays an
elderly cop nearing retirement, while Terri Collins is his robotic
assistant with the sort of vacant mannerisms once used to great effect by
Keely Smith on television.
David Carnevale’s upscale, two-level setting is an ideal backdrop for
all the commotion, and the costumes of Donna Fritsche are appealing,
particularly Hill’s sultry wardrobe, which undergoes an unexplained
change.
“Rumors,” as written, is nonstop hilarity from its opening --literally
starting off with a bang -- to its tableau fade-out, which instantly
explains the situation the actors have been wrestling with all evening.
Even if you’re familiar with this play, you’ll cherish the Newport
rendition.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
FYI
WHAT: ‘Rumors’
WHERE: Newport Theater Arts Center, 2501 Cliff Drive, Newport Beach
WHEN: 8 p.m. Thursdays through Saturdays; 2:30 p.m. Sundays until Dec.
17
COST: $13
CALL: (949) 631-0288
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