| |
|
PREVIEW: Actors
Comedy Lab and Theatre in the Park Preview: Rural Ireland and Hollywood
Clash in Marie Jones’ Stones in His Pockets
by
Robert W. McDowell
Raleigh, NC-based Actors Comedy Lab and Theatre in the
Park will present a joint production of Stones in His Pockets, a zany
two-character comedy written by Belfast, Northern Ireland playwright
Marie Jones and directed by ACL co-founder Rod Rich, Dec. 3-12 at TIP.
The show debuted in West Belfast in 1996, and a 1999 Belfast production
of Stones in His Pockets transferred to the West End, opening in May
2000 at the New Ambassadors Theatre in London, where the play won the
2000 London Evening Standard Theatre Award for Best Comedy and the 2001
Laurence Olivier Award for Best New Comedy.
The show’s 1999 Belfast cast of Seán Campion and Conleth Hill playing two rural Irish lads who are hired as extras for a big-budget Hollywood
film to be shot on location in County Kerry opened the show in London. (The
film is called The Quiet Valley to evoke memories of The Quiet Man, director
John Ford’s 1952 masterpiece staring John Wayne and Maureen O’Hara).
Messrs. Campion and Hill were nominated for the 2001 Tony Award® for Best
Actor in Play after the show made its Broadway debut on April 1, 2001 at the
John Golden Theatre, where it played 198 performances.
The ACL/TIP presentation of Stones in His Pockets will star Actors Comedy Lab
stalwart Tony Hefner as Jake Quinn and veteran Durham actor David Bartlett, a.k.a.
Mr. Rainbow the Clown, as Charlie Conlon. In the Greater Tuna tradition, Messrs.
Hefner and Bartlett will also play a veritable smorgasbord of other meaty roles
earthy Irish townspeople and spoiled-rotten Tinseltown types who experience
a hilarious culture clash during the making of the film in rural Ireland.
Director Rod Rich says, “It took seeing this show twice to decide to do
it. For one thing, it’s murder to read the entire play is performed
by two people, and the script isn’t terribly helpful about who these characters
are or where they are, so you have to figure that out as you go, or keep flipping
back to the front of the book to the character descriptions. All in all, [it
was] fairly intimidating, so it took me a year to decide it might be fun to tackle.
"The show that did it for me,” Rich claims, “was a production
we saw in London last February. The two guys just looked like they were having
so much fun that it was hard to resist!”
Rich declares, “This is no play for wimps! Unlike other two-actor shows
like Greater Tuna, there’re no costume changes or even entrances and exits
to delineate that a new character has just appeared, so it all has to be done
by acting. The stakes are high: if the audience can’t follow the story
with all the transitions and starts to fall behind, it’s going to be a
very long night at the theater.”
In thumbnailing the plot, Rich says, “An American film crew is shooting
a movie in a small town in Ireland, and practically the entire populace is performing
as extras in the movie. Two of the extras, Jake (Tony Hefner) and Charlie (David
Bartlett), have failed in everything they’ve tried to date, so they’re
trying to chart their future in film amidst encounters with a condescending film
crew, a dotty director, and the diva movie star who likes to ‘go native,’ and
local events that threaten to spark a mutiny among the extras.”
In addition to director Rod Rich, who shares sound-design
duties with Rowell Gormon, the show’s production team includes Rich’s
wife, Nancy Rich, as choreographer; and TIP technical director Stephen
J. Larson as set and lighting
designer.
Rod Rich says the play’s set is a “low stone wall, a trunk, and the
sky of Ireland projected behind”; its lighting is simple (“Lights
up, lights down”); and its costumes are nothing fancy: “Work clothes.
Comfortable. Simple.”
Rich also claims, “This is a virtuoso piece for two actors. Since there’s
very little technical support by design, this play is a real high-wire act
where [David Bartlett and Tony Hefner] have to create almost 20 characters;
evoke the
locations; and, bless them, even dance.
"The story-telling is all in Stones in His Pockets,” Rich says. “We
need to make sure that an audience understands what we’re doing from
the first transition on, and can get caught up in the lives of our characters.
So,
character definition has been crucial, as has been working out a physical language
to transition to each character so the audience always understands when a new
character is coming on stage.”
Rod Rich notes, “While the examples set by previous shows I’d seen
were helpful, those shows were all done on a proscenium stage, whereas the layout
at TIP is more of a thrust arrangement. This meant working out new ways to ‘morph’ between
characters. While that was part of the fun, it also meant weeks of experimentation,
trying out new blocking by the end of the rehearsal period, learning the
blocking was almost as tricky as memorizing the lines.”
In reviewing the show’s critically acclaimed London run, which included
more than 1,000 performances, The Guardian wrote, “[Stones
in His Pockets]
is clearly magical, this comedy by Belfast writer, Marie Jones, dealing as
it does with myths, memories, class and sex, with two actors who create a whole
world on stage. Jones’s subject, the disruptive impact of a film crew
on a small Irish community, may not be brand new it was the theme of Martin
McDonagh’s
The Cripple of Inishmaan but what is refreshing is her wide awake view of
Hollywood cultural colonialism.... In the end, Jones’s play
is a passionate defence of daily reality in a world crazed by celebrity and
dominated
by the
hackneyed tastes of the movie tsars. Even if her conclusion has a strained,
feelgood quality, she has a ruthlessly sharp eye for the effects of cinematic
imperialism.
But much of the evening’s joy comes from the dazzling virtuosity of the
two performers [who] catch the absurdity of movie making as the extras react
to non-existent events and yet execute an Irish reel with panache. The play
itself not only sends up the delirious fantasy of film, it becomes a moving
and heartfelt
tribute to the imaginative power of live performance.”
Actors Comedy Lab and Theatre in the Park present Stones
in His Pockets Friday-Saturday,
Dec. 3-4, at 8 p.m.; Sunday, Dec. 5, at 3 p.m.; Wednesday-Saturday, Dec. 8-11,
at 8 p.m.; Sunday, Dec. 12, at 3 p.m. at TIP, 107 Pullen Rd., Raleigh, North
Carolina. $15 Friday-Saturday and $12 Sunday, Wednesday, and Thursday, with
a $2 discount to TIP season members and A Christmas Carol ticket holders.
919/831-6058. Actors Comedy Lab: http://www.actorscomedylab.com/next.html.
Theatre in the Park: http://theatreinthepark.com/pages/co-productions/co-productions.htm
[inactive 3/05].
Internet
Broadway Database: http://www.ibdb.com/Show.asp?id=10511.
REVIEW:
Actors Comedy Lab and Theatre in the Park Review:
Two Actors Create a Whole Irish Community in Marie Jones’ Stones in His Pockets
by
Alan R. Hall
So what do cows have to do with a Hollywood
movie being shot in County Kerry, Ireland? And why is one
staring back at us from the cover of the program? The answer
to the first question is, nothing. The answer to the second
is, everything. But the only two people in the entire town
who can tell us exactly how are Charlie and Jack, two extras
in the film being shot, an epic Irish historical called The
Quiet Valley. They are the two principals in a 25-character
show now onstage at Theatre in the Park titled Stones
in His Pockets, presented by Actors Comedy Lab and TIP.
Charlie (David Bartlett) meets Jack (Tony Hefner) on the first day of shooting.
The two are only a pair out of a flock of local residents hired to give the film “local
color,” and they are more than happy to be there; the job pays 40 quid
a day. But we know, as audience members, that the two are not the only characters
in this work; these two exceptional actors recreate a total of 25 different people
as they progress through the play, a rollicking comedy that suddenly brings us
up short at the end of Act 1. That’s when we learn the reason for the play’s
title, Stones in His Pockets.
Actors Comedy Lab and Theatre in the Park probably could not have come up with
a better pair to pull off this two-man show. Bartlett has been doing comedy all
his life, not only onstage, but also as a professional clown with a now-world-wide
following, “Mr. Rainbow.” Hefner is also a master at the multi-tasking
job of playing a multitude of characters in the same show; he just finished his
latest adventure in that arena this summer in ACL’s Comic Potential. These
two together bring a score-plus of characters alive onstage, with marvelous split-second
timing, acutely identifiable characters, a comedic demeanor that is indefatigable,
and an ability to go from knee-slapping hilarity to unnerving severity with a
simple change of expression.
Rod Rich, ACL’s perennial director, manages to set these two up so that
we, as observers, can see more than just the two of them onstage at the same
time. This is done with music, lighting, creative staging, and a troupe of people
we only see the shoes of: all those extras the film company has hired. But even
though playwright Marie Jones does bring us up very short in the last few seconds
of Act I, most of this show is one laugh-line after another, and this pair pulls
them off with alacrity. “Comedy” does not begin to describe the humor
of this Irish laugh-fest.
Part of the fun of this show is to watch each character “enter” and “exit.” Since
neither Bartlett nor Hefner ever leaves the stage, watching this process is something
akin to watching a film script; one second a character is there and the next,
he isn’t. Someone else has appeared in his place. It is enough to give
any one actor pause, if he is foolish enough to stop and think about it. Nevertheless,
these two go about it as if they were born to it, and make it look easy.
What makes this comedy Irish is that the comedy comes from the fact that there
is desperation all around these characters, from Charlie and Jack themselves,
to Finn, a buddy of Jack’s, and Sean, a younger fellow who would very much
like to be in the film. Unfortunately, he is a bit too much of a pothead to be
eligible. At one point, Sean (Hefner) tries to approach Caroline Giovanni (Bartlett),
the star of the film, in the local pub; Giovanni has the poor wastrel tossed
out on his ear by her bodyguard. Everyone in town, it seems, witnesses this humiliation.
What happens next is what brings us all up short, and it is also the reason behind
that kerchiefed cow that looks soulfully back at us from the front of the program.
That cow is the brainstorm of Charlie and Jack, who themselves write a screenplay
in Act II.
This joint production of Actors Comedy Lab and Theatre in the Park is an absolute
delight, and one well worth seeing. Superb action, well-controlled characters,
and a typical Irish comedy/drama setting make this work one to put on your list
for holiday viewing. But be quick and make your reservations now; the show only
runs through this Sunday.
Actors Comedy Lab and Theatre in the Park present Stones
in His Pockets Wednesday-Saturday, Dec. 8-11, at 8 p.m.; Sunday, Dec. 12,
at 3 p.m. at TIP, 107 Pullen Rd., Raleigh, North Carolina. $15 Friday-Saturday
and $12
Sunday, Wednesday, and Thursday, with a $2 discount to TIP season members and A
Christmas Carol ticket holders. 919/831-6058. Actors Comedy Lab: http://www.actorscomedylab.com/next.html.
Theatre in the Park: http://theatreinthepark.com/pages/co-productions/co-productions.htm
[inactive 3/05].
Internet Broadway Database: http://www.ibdb.com/Show.asp?id=10511.
|
|