Jason Weed, Sarah Ominski, Kraig Williams, Erin Bickler, Adam Caniparoli, and Essie Bertain. Photo by Ammon Riley. |
By Tina Arth
Fans of broad farce will absolutely love Beaverton Civic
Theatre’s 2016 holiday offering, Sorry!
Wrong Chimney. Director Meghan Daaboul has assembled a team of uninhibited
comics willing to figuratively and literally let it all hang out in search of
laughs, and the payoff is a cascade of slapstick merriment.
The story is set entirely in the living room of newlyweds
Samantha and David’s big-city apartment. Samantha feels neglected – David is
rarely home, and even when he’s there he’s too exhausted for much loving. What
she doesn’t know is that he is moonlighting as a department store Santa to pay
for a special Christmas present for his bride. Neighbor Natalie is full of
sympathy, since her psychiatrist husband Bill is no more attentive. Enter the
much-feared Santa Claus Bandit, Kris (it seems that nobody locks their doors in
this city). After innumerable chases, entrances, and exits by the entire cast,
including Kris’ girlfriend Sheila and an intrepid policeman, Bill’s somewhat
imprecise hypnotherapy skills help to restore a semblance of order.
Both Samantha (Essie Bertain) and David (Adam Caniparoli)
fill ingĂ©nue roles, so their performances are (relatively) subdued – but in
this production “relatively subdued” still leaves a lot of room for sudden
pratfalls (or whatever you call it when a pretty young woman throws herself
atop a blanket-clad neighbor to deceive her husband and his wife) and other
physical comedy – and Bertain and Caniparoli make the most of these moments.
Bill (Kraig Williams) has a slightly supercilious manner that contrasts nicely
with his inept therapeutic skills, and Erin Bickler’s strong, consistent New
York accent helps to establish a sense of locale while making every line just that
extra bit funnier. The third couple (Kris and Sheila, played by Jason Weed and
Sarah Ominski) is very different – I would call them stereotypical working
class, but in order to attain that status at least one has to have a job title
more elevated than bumbling burglar. Weed uses his rather immense size to
create a pathetically unthreatening and hapless bandit, and Ominski simply
rocks the bright red wig and too-too tacky dress during an alarmingly chaste
seduction scene.
The real standout performance for me is Benjamin Philip as
the policeman, even though he spends much of the show in a trancelike state,
victimized repeatedly by Bill’s awkward hypnosis. Philip the policeman is fine,
but Philip the birthday stripper is a shining jewel who must be seen to be
believed, and his third act contortions by themselves are worth the whole price
of admission.
Sorry! Wrong Chimney
fills a critical niche in a busy holiday schedule – pure comic relief, with no
more expectations laid on the audience than that they sit back and laugh. The
opening night audience had no trouble fulfilling this job description, and I am
sure future audiences will also be up to the challenge.
Beaverton Civic Theatre’s Sorry! Wrong Chimney runs through Saturday, December 17th
at the Beaverton City Library Auditorium. Performances are at 7:30 p.m. on
Friday and Saturday and 2:00 p.m. on Sunday. December 11th.
Another great review from Tina. I totally agree; this show was fun from start to finish. Don't miss it!
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