.jpg) |
At Bag&Baggage Productions, Jessica Geffen as Lana North-Berkshire, Adam Syron as Francis Fishbourne, Gary Strong as Winston Whiteside, Ian Armstrong as Carlson Callaway, Megan Carver as Petunia Pennywhistle and Branden McFarland as Pete Paulson, photo courtesy of Casey Campbell Photography |
By Tina Arth and Darrell Baker
Hillsboro residents are fortunate to have two companies
offering live theater in town – HART and Bag&Baggage. From a community
perspective, these very different troupes should not be viewed as rivals, but
as complementary players, each group offering something uniquely wonderful to
local fans of live theater.
Bag&Baggage’s stage in the glamorous old Venetian
Theatre gives them room for lush shows with elaborate sets (and huge
audiences). HART’s compact theater provides a cozy space where patrons and
actors are separated by only a few feet, providing an intimate connection
between cast and audience.
Bag&Baggage gives lots of local high school students their first
opportunity to experience live theater through its TEN4ONE program, offering
free tickets on a space available basis. HART, through its symbiotic
relationship with the STAGES Performing Arts Youth Academy, gives many
Hillsboro-area youth their first chance to sing, dance, and act on a real
stage. Bag&Baggage has, in lieu of a lobby, an upscale full-service
restaurant and bar. At intermission, HART’s petite lobby lures patrons with the
scent of freshly baked cookies and fresh-brewed coffee (not to mention free
champagne on opening nights!).
It’s Christmas, 2013, and suddenly worlds collide. Both
groups are offering what seems to be essentially the same show – It’s A Wonderful Life, the Radio Show (HART)
and It’s A (Somewhat) Wonderful Life (Bag&Baggage). Remarkably, the two productions, like the
troupes that spawned them, are complementary rather than duplicative. Read on
to find out how!
HART
 |
Jody Spradlin, Karen Roder, and Aaron Morrow at HART. |
HART Theatre’s theme this season is “HART Looks At Art,” and
this year’s holiday show fits like a glove. For those people too young to have
attended the taping of a live radio show (and that includes almost everybody!)
HART’s presentation of It’s A Wonderful
Life – A Live Radio Show may be as close as they’ll get to this grand old
American tradition. Director Paul Roder has clearly done his homework – the
HART set closely replicates the conditions in a small-town, late 40’s radio
studio – a row of chairs, a row of microphones, a row of actors, a table full
of sound effects for the Foley artist, a live audience (us), a clock, and two
signs (“ON AIR” and “APPLAUSE”).
It’s A Wonderful Life
is curiously dark for a holiday favorite – this fundamentally depressing tale
of the very good, but suicidal George Bailey is saved at the last minute (as is
George) by the intervention of a Guardian Angel, Clarence. Throughout his life,
George’s dreams have been dashed by bad fortune, so much that he thinks it
would be better if he had never been born. By showing how the world would have
been without George Bailey, Clarence lifts George’s spirits and convinces him
that his life has, in fact, been wonderful in its own way.
Movie audiences familiar with Jimmy Stewart’s classic
portrayal may not recognize the George Bailey they remember in Aaron Morrow’s
performance. Stewart’s Bailey, while depressed and angry, retains an avuncular,
cartoonish flavor. Morrow brings a darker tone, creating a real character whose
private despair bursts out in moments of genuine anger.
In radio dramas, a small group of actors are called upon to
play multiple parts. Paul Roder sets the record – in addition to directing, he
plays eleven different characters, switching from voice to voice and accent to
accent with lightning speed. Tony Smith and Ilana Watson are hard on Roder’s
heels, with 10 parts each, and they bring a versatile professionalism that
rivals that of the authentic radio performers of the era. Jody Spradlin, while
required to play only the part of Mary Hatch Bailey, fills a key role – her
warmth and empathy help the audience understand that George is truly blessed,
despite the hardships he has endured. Karen Roder puts them all to shame – in
addition to doing costumes, window and lobby décor, in her portrayal of Foley
artist Gladys “Gizmo” Watkins she is the busiest actor on the set.
While the show technically begins at 7:30 (air time for the
radio drama), audiences are advised to come early. The theater opens at 7:00,
and by 7:15 the WBFR singers (Seth Rue, Sarah Thornton, and Emily Miletta the
evening we were there) are warming up the audience with a selection of holiday
and ‘40s pop tunes.
It’s A Wonderful Life
– A Live Radio Show plays at the HART Theatre, 185 SE Washington, Hillsboro
on December 5th, 8th, 12th and 15th
at 7:30 pm, and December 7th and 14th at 2:00 pm.
BAG&BAGGAGE
It’s A (Somewhat)
Wonderful Life is many things – fast-paced, funny, engaging, and witty, to
name just a few. The one thing it is not is It’s A Wonderful Life. The Frank Capra classic, as adapted by
director Scott Palmer, is not so much the story as it is the vehicle through
which the story is told.
 |
Jessica Geffen as Lana North-Berkshire and Ian Armstrong as Carlson Callaway, photo courtesy of Casey Campbell Photography |
A group of veteran radio actors have gathered for the annual
Christmas broadcast of It’s A Wonderful
Life. In a curious parallel to the life of IAWL star George Bailey, from
the beginning nothing goes right. A fanzine has reported erroneously that star
Petunia Pennywhistle loves rum-soaked fruitcake, and station WBNB is inundated
with fruitcakes sent by her adoring public. Petunia dumps the fruitcakes on
production assistant Pete Paulson, who absent-mindedly nibbles his way to total
inebriation just before airtime. Two key players are missing – the other female
lead (who has ditched them to play the Ghost of Christmas Future in another
production), and the Foley artist/special effects guru. The drunken Paulson is
ordered to replace the Foley artist, a role in which he would have been inept
even if he were sober. Player Winston Whiteside arrives with his bimbo du jour,
lingerie saleslady Lana North-Berkshire, for whom he has rewritten parts of the
show. The tension is heightened by
jealousy between handsome lead Carlson Calaway and Francis Fishburne, who
harbors a powerful yen for the fair Ms. Pennywhistle. Somehow the cast manages
to lurch through the radio script – it’s a true Christmas miracle! Along the
way, the audience is treated to some of the best comedy moments of the season.
The strong six-person cast fills a multitude of roles with a
combination of sharp delivery and broad physical comedy. Despite the chaotic set-up, the characters never step over the line from
slapstick to unrestrained farce. Ian Armstrong (Calaway) is hilarious as he
slips from his character’s haughty demeanor to a truly boffo Jimmy Stewart
impersonation. Branden McFarland (Pete
Paulson) makes the most of the oft-thankless role of male ingénue, despite
being mute throughout Act I. Somehow he manages to constantly draw the
audience’s attention by being virtually (and sometimes literally) invisible to
the rest of the cast. His impassioned speech in Act II pulls the radio show
together; a moment that could have been disgustingly maudlin is saved when he
concludes his speech with a dead-drunk pratfall.
Jessica Geffen simply sparkles in her portrayal of Lana
North-Berkshire. She is a crass, brassy, bawdy innocent, dazzled by the lure of
show biz and 100% committed as she hurls herself into one absurd
characterization after another. Scott Palmer has created a very funny role, and
Geffen lets none of the comic potential slip away.
It’s A (Somewhat)
Wonderful Life is too good a show to be limited to one run at the Venetian.
We hope that Scott Palmer will share his script and staging with other theater
companies so that a wider audience can join in the fun.
Bag&Baggage’s production of It’s A (Somewhat) Wonderful Life is playing at the Venetian
Theatre, 253 E. Main Street, Hillsboro through Monday, December 23d.