The Ghost & Spice Productions’ presentation of The
Miss Firecracker Contest by award-winning Mississippi
playwright Beth Henley (Crimes of the Heart) is a rib-tickling
Southern Gothic comedy about a misfit and perennial screw-up
named Carnelle Scott (Tracey Coppedge), who hopes to gain redemption
and a measure of acceptance by her fellow residents of Brookhaven,
MS, by winning the town’s annual Miss Firecracker Contest.
The only problem is, Carnelle does not have the “right
stuff” to win even a small-town beauty contest. She is
plump and not particularly pretty or graceful, and she is spectacularly
untalented. Her plans to twirl batons, wave sparklers, and tap-dance
to the “Star Spangled Banner” are a sure-fire recipe
for yet another public humiliation — and further bruises
to her already damaged self-esteem.
Tracey Coppedge brings a wonderful sense of seriousness and determination
to the wacky role of Carnelle, who is not exactly the Picture of
Grace and Beauty that most beauty contest winners are. Nevertheless,
Carnelle thinks she has a chance, no matter how ludicrous her act
appears to her friends and the audience at Common Ground Theatre
in Durham, NC, where Ghost & Spice Productions will perform The
Miss Firecracker Contest on Oct. 11-14 and 18-20.
While Tracey Coppedge is getting guffaws, playing it straight, Lenore
Field and Melissa Lozoff are getting belly-laughs with their antics
as Carnelle’s snooty cousin and former winner Miss Firecracker
Contest Elain Rutledge and Carnelle’s goofy four-eyed friend
and seamstress for the pageant Popeye Jackson. Rus Hames is amusing
as Carnelle’s former boyfriend Mac Sam, an aging hippy carnival
worker consumed by an untreated case of an unmentionable social disease,
and Michelle Byars is a scream as Mac Sam’s hideously ugly
former fling and the current Miss Firecracker Contest pageant stage
manager Tessy Mahoney, who would like nothing better than to renew
old acquaintance — say, out under the willows — with
Mac Sam.
But it is Jeff Alguire who brings down the house with his side-splitting
impersonation of Carnelle’s oddball cousin Delmount Williams,
who wears a smoking jacket and pretends to puff a pipe to appear
more sophisticated. Fresh off an involuntary stint in the state loony
bin, Delmount has returned to sell the family home that he inherited
out from under Carnelle, who still lives there, and his sister Elain,
who might have expected to share the inheritance.
Delmount Williams is a juicy comic character, and Jeff Alguire really
sinks his teeth into this meaty role. Alguire employs an assortment
of eye-rolls, pretentious poses struck, and constant fussing with
his thinning, greasy hair to get the laughter rolling before he even
has time to uncork one of Delmount’s quirky observations about
the denizens of Brookhaven and his persecution at the hands of well-meaning
family, who thought he needed to be institutionalized.
The director has coaxed crackerjack comic
characterization from the entire ensemble. Employing a new seating
configuration to heighten the hilarity, the director works with
set designer Jeff Alguire, lighting and sound designer Rus Hames,
costume
designer
Lenore Field, and properties mistresses Tracey Coppedge and Michelle
Byars to make The Miss Firecracker Contest go off with a
bang, like the Roman candles that Carnelle uses in her act. Unlike
Carnelle’s Miss Firecracker Contest act, this Ghost & Spice
production is a real winner.
Ghost & Spice Productions
presents The Miss
Firecracker Contest Thursday-Saturday, Oct. 11-13
and 18-20, at 8 p.m. and Sunday, Oct. 14, at 2 p.m. at Common Ground
Theatre, 4815B Hillsborough Rd., Durham, North Carolina. $14 ($12
students and seniors), except all tickets are half price on Thursdays.
888/239-9253. Ghost & Spice
Productions: http://www.ghostandspice.com//.
Internet Movie Database: http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0097892/.