TOM TITUS -- Theater Review
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Theatergoers whose only experience with Anton Chekhov’s brooding,
introspective plays, such as “The Sea Gull” or “The Cherry Orchard,” may
be surprised to learn that the Russian playwright cut his creative teeth
on the lighter side of life.
Three such examples are on display at Orange Coast College in a
program titled “Anton Chekhov Short Comedies,” assembled by the students
of the OCC Repertory Theater. They range from slapstick to subtlety,
often intermingling the genres.
Two short pieces and one extended exercise comprise the program, with
the most thoroughly realized segment, “The Sneeze,” leading off the
evening. Completely wordless, the “playlet” is steeped in physical
comedy, depicting the plight of a nervous young fellow who, during a
night at the ballet, has the misfortune to sneeze on a fellow Russian of
an obviously higher station in life.
Angel Correa portrays the luckless sneezer, comically overcompensating
for his faux pas until the evening is thrown into pandemonium -- all
enacted to the music of the ballet, which he and his wife (Heather
Laylon) are ostensibly enjoying while seated behind the mogul (Frank
Miyashiro) and his companion (Angela Lopez).
Correa’s pantomimed histrionics are reminiscent of the silent movie
comics such as Harold Lloyd or Buster Keaton, and are consistently on
target. Miyashiro seethes effectively as the “sneezee,” with Laylon
contributing a marvelous bit of business as she carries on a continual
fracas with Correa while Lopez attempts to ignore the goofy antics around
her. Director Sean F. Gray contributes a clever cameo as an usher.
Miyashiro returns for a one-man gig in “On the Harmfulness of
Tobacco,” directed by faculty advisor Rick Golson. In this one, Miyashiro
expounds on virtually every conceivable topic except the subject of his
lecture, plaintively bemoaning his marital and financial woes while
bringing to mind the scrambled semantics of Professor Irwin Corey.
Closing the program is “The Bear,” a rather overdone offering
involving a widow (Isabella Melo), her servant (Correa again, this time
as a doddering old man) and the stern citizen (Ryan Gray) who comes to
collect a debt incurred by the late husband.
Directed by Ramsey Schlissel, the piece presents three nicely
established characters, then proceeds to run them in circles, covering
the same ground time and again. The outcome probably is predictable, but
it’s not reached soon enough, even in a rather short play.
Melo has some well-crafted moments as the widow, and Gray wrestles
with the extended Chekhovian dialogue, which isn’t calculated to advance
his character. Again, Correa swipes his scenes with some inspired
foolishness.
Taken together, the pieces represent a valuable theatrical history
lesson, and the OCC students present them commendably. Their next project
probably should be Neil Simon’s “The Good Doctor,” a collection of
theater pieces based on Chekhov’s works.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot.
FYI
WHAT: “Anton Chekhov Short Comedies”
WHERE: Orange Coast College Studio Theater, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa
Mesa
WHEN: Closing performances at 2 and 7 p.m. Saturday and Sunday
COST: $6 or $7
CALL: (714) 432-5640, Ext. 1
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