What the Towne Players’ energetic encore production
of The Foreigner by Larry Shue lacks in
acting polish, it more than makes up in contagious high spirits.
Staging this side-splitting comedy with much the same cast as the
Garner, NC-based community theater’s 2003 presentation, Towne
Players artistic director Beth Honeycutt employs a very broad brush,
which kept last Saturday night’s audience guffawing throughout
the evening, which ended with a standing ovation.
The Foreigner stars Greg Flowers as the title
character: sad-sack Charlie Baker, who reluctantly accompanies his
indomitable friend, British S/Sgt. and demolition expert “Froggy” LeSueur
(Don Howard), on a weekend military exercise in rural Georgia, where
Charlie pretends that he doesn’t speak English, so he won’t
have to speak with the locals while he nurses a heart shattered in
a million little pieces by the serial infidelities of his faithless
and ostensibly fatally ill wife.
Flowers, who in recent years has emerged as one of
the Triangle’s finest comic actors, is in top form in The
Foreigner; and Rusty Sutton also is a scream as roly-poly Ellard
Simms, Charlie Baker’s well-meaning but hopelessly dim-witted
sidekick and co-conspirator in a desperate scheme to prevent the
local chapter of the Ku Klux Klan from taking over Betty Meeks’ Fishing
Lodge Resort. The scene in which the lumbering, thick-tongued Ellard
tries to teach English to the mercurial Charlie, in fits and starts,
with Ellard’s fractured syntax and Southern speech mannerisms
stretching one-syllable words to two syllables or more, and Charlie
copying him sound for sound, is one of the funniest comic interludes
of this or any other theater season.
Don Howard plays Froggy with a bit too much of a stiff
upper lip, and he and Frances Stanley lack the onstage chemistry
to make the smoldering romance between LeSueur and Betty Meeks really
catch fire. Michael Armstrong comes on a bit too strong as loathsome,
loud-mouthed, and thoroughly corrupt Tilghman County property inspector
Owen Musser, but he still has some amusing moments. Kelly Stansell
is much funnier as poor pregnant heiress Catherine Simms, and Roberto
Velarde is wonderfully wicked as Catherine’s tall, dark, and
handsome but treacherous fiancé the Rev. David Marshall Lee.
The Towne Players’ uproarious rendition of The Foreigner greatly
benefits from the splendid set devised by director Beth Honeycutt
and her husband, technical director Scott Honeycutt. All in all, The
Foreigner is an entertaining — if uneven — rendition
of an Off-Broadway hit that could be even funnier if some of the
rough spots were smoothed out.
The Towne Players present The
Foreigner Thursday-Saturday,
May 24-26, at 8 p.m. in Garner Historic Auditorium, 742 West Garner
Rd., Garner, North Carolina. $10 ($8 students and seniors 55+).
919/779-6144l.
The Towne Players: http://www.towneplayers.com/ [inactive 9/10].
Garner Historic Auditorium: http://www.ci.garner.nc.us/historicaud.htm
[nactive 1/10].