The Battle of Shallowford,
a charming but lightweight comedy by Winston-Salem, NC dramatist
and screenwriter Ed Simpson, impishly imagines what would happen
on a quiet Sunday night at Burton Mock’s General Store in
the small N.C. town of Shallowford (allegedly modeled on Simpson’s
hometown of Lewisville), if the excitable locals had listened to
Mercury Theatre on the Air director Orson Welles’ inflammatory
Oct. 30, 1938 Halloween broadcast of The War of the Worlds by
H. G. Wells, and somehow though thought that the Martians actually had landed
in New Jersey, and were rapidly working their way south to the
Tar Heel State.
The current Raleigh
Little Theatre production, staged
with warmth and wit by long-time RLT artistic director Haskell
Fitz-Simons, stars Kirsten Ehlert as Ruthie Mock, the storekeeper’s
starry-eyed daughter, and Jason Justice as “Loony” Lonny
Hutchins, the class nerd who loves science-fiction and suddenly
finds his secret crush on Ruthie requited during the exigencies
in the moment. When there puppy love goes into overdrive, because
Ruthie thinks the world is about to end, both Ruthie and the play
lose some of their innocence.
Timothy Cherry and Shawn Smith are highly amusing
as bickering buddies Clunette Campbell and Roy Sprinkle; and Michael
Saintomas is good as Ruthie’s former beau Dewey Sowers, a
stuck-on-himself football letterman and all-around Big Man on Campus.
Pat Berry is a bit bland as Burton Mock, but Don Smith is very
funny as fussbudget high-school teacher Fred Martin, and Phil Lewis
and David Corlett provide considerable comic relief as taciturn
Newsome Jarvis and dimwitted “Doodad” Jarvis.
Set designer Rick Young has done a magnificent job
of creating Mock’s General Store and post office in glorious
detail, costume designer Jenny Butler has dressed the cast in a
colorful assortment of 1930s fashions, lighting designer Jim Zervas
expertly illuminates the phlegmatic first act and the frantic second
act, and sound designer Becca Easley skillfully interweaves snippets
from The War of the Worlds and other vintage radio broadcasts
into the action.
The Battle of Shallowford might not be a
must-see comedy, but it is a pleasant way to spend a fall evening
(or an afternoon). Watching the chaos that ensues when the unaware
finally hear and overreact to the series of alarming news bulletins
that leaven Orson Welles’ infamous broadcast is a lot of
fun, but never the laff riot that might be expected.
Raleigh Little Theatre presents The
Battle of Shallowford Thursday-Saturday,
Oct. 18-20, at 8 p.m.; Sunday, Oct. 21, at 3 p.m. in RLT’s
Cantey V. Sutton Theatre, 301 Pogue St., Raleigh, North Carolina.
$18 ($15 students and seniors), except 410 Oct. 7th. 919/ 821-3111
or or via etix @ the presenter's site. Note: All
shows are wheelchair accessible,
and assistive listening devices are available for all shows. Raleigh
Little Theatre: http://raleighlittletheatre.org/performances/07-08/shallowford.html
[inactive 9/09]. The Battle of Shallowford: http://www.mirthmaster.com/shallowford.htm
[inactive 9/09].
Ed Simpson: http://www.mirthmaster.com/ [inactive 9/09].