Raleigh, NC, October 28, 2008: Recreating
their own special brand of theatrical magic for N.C.
State University Center Stage on Oct. 28th, just two days prior to the 70th anniversary
of the Orson Welles’ infamous “War of the Worlds” radio
broadcast, L.A. Theatre Works presented a delightful two-act program
of radio-theater versions of War of the Worlds by
H.G. Wells and The Lost World by Arthur
Conan Doyle. For the former, they used Howard Koch’s script
from Welles’ notorious Mercury Theatre on the Air October 30,
1938 Halloween program, which terrified thousands of Columbia Broadcasting
System listeners who thought the Martians had actually landed in
New Jersey. The script for The Lost World was penned by
twin bill director John de Lancie and Nat Segaloff. (De Lancie is
probably most famous for playing Q on “Star Trek Next Generation,” “Deep
Space Nine,” and “Voyager.”)
Both science-fiction stories are highly entertaining. Director John
de Lancie generates edge-of-your-seat suspense, but generously leavens
the suspenseful shows with humorous moments; and L.A. Theatre Works’ seven-member
cast plays dozens of characters, slickly segueing from role to role
to role while imbuing each character with a distinct personality.
In War of the Worlds, Josh Clark performed
the Orson Welles part of eminent astronomer Professor Richard Pierson
with plenty of panache, narrating the catastrophic events that followed
the shocking Martian invasion with impressive depth of feeling. Kenneth
Alan Williams was also excellent as intrepid on-the-spot radio reporter
Carl Phillips, whose ill-fated trip to the frontlines at Grover’s
Mill (now West Windsor Township, Princeton, NJ) put him in scorching
distance of the invaders “Heat-Ray.”
Kyle Colerider-Krugh was also good as a studio announcer with a
golden voice; Jerry Hardin gave a chilling performance as a creepy
survivor of the initial Martian attack whom Professor Richard Pierson
meets on the battlefield; and Diane Adair, Jen Dede, and Peter McDonald
added crisp cameos as assorted overstressed broadcasters, military
men, and government officials, reacting rapidly if not always wisely
to the Martian invasion of New Jersey and nearby New York City.
After the unspeakable horrors of War of the Worlds, The
Lost World was a welcome respite — a delightful roller-coaster
ride through the remotest regions of the Amazon, where dinosaurs
still roam and a tribe of ape-like men threatens the undermanned
British expedition led by world-renowned zoologist Professor George
Edward Challenger (Josh Clark). Clark was dashing as a globetrotting
professor, whose discovery of dinosaurs in South America is widely
pooh-poohed by his colleagues; Jen Dede was a treat as Challenger’s
fellow scientist and most incorrigible critic Professor Summerlee;
Kenneth Alan Williams was delightful as ambitious London Gazette reporter
Edward Malone, and Jerry Hardin was amusing as Malone’s flinty
news editor. Diane Adair played Gladys White, the woman whom Edward
loves, with pizzazz; Peter McDonald cut a dashing figure as sportsman
and explorer Lord John Roxton; and Kyle Colerider-Krugh put his
own special twist on the part of the expedition’s treacherous
Amazon Indian guide Gomez and other assorted colorful cameo roles.
John De Lancie’s dynamic direction kept War of the Worlds and The
Lost World fresh, fast-paced, scary, and funny. Scenic designer
Brad Kaye’s minimalist set, lighting designer Trevor Norton’s
artful illumination of the action, wardrobe supervisor Ela Erwin’s
vivid outfits, and sound designer Lindsay Jones electronic wizardry
also added snap, crackle, and pop to the program. L.A. Theatre
Works’ radio-drama trick proved quite a treat for Tuesday
night’s N.C. State University Center Stage audience.