Friday, December 11, 2009

The Mystery on 34th Street at the Hickory Community Theatre

It was a good, workmanlike presentation for a community theatre. But more mysteries occurred on 34th Street last night than miracles. One mystery was to wonder why the person who adapted this play for the presentation took so long to properly introduce the guy who would be Santa's defense attorney, and the "friend" of the lead actress. He was one of the main characters, but he began as just a fellow worker at Macy's and had to kind of elbow his way in to his role. He did very well in both parts.

Another one of the Mysteries on 34th Street, was the lead actress. She had perhaps the pivotal role in the play since the action always came back to her, and it had to wait on her lead. This role seems to call out for a dynamic personality, one with appropriated gestures and a satisfyingly loud voice of command. For an aspiring community theatre actress she was good. But still, I carried the impression that I was watching an actress playing a role. She was not the character she played. She was not performing THE role that was the only reason she had been placed on the earth, and I did not get the impression that she was engaging in an act of creation herself.

But THE REAL MYSTERY was the actor who really stood out and carried the play over some of its tricky moments, and who was clearly having fun playing his role, and who BROUGHT MAGIC IN to the evening's performance. And he was somebody I couldn't identify from the cast of characters. He played the role of the "city boss" and the lead postman. It was fun to watch him. I will get his name and get it in here. We wanted to vote for him, since we had a ballot, but couldn't find him listed there either.

Mark Atkins played Mr. Shellhammer well, and he seemed to be enhancing that role into new dimensions as it unfolded. I bet his wife has to put him in a decompression chamber for an hour or two after he gets home.

The Defense Attorney, Brian Plemmons, seemed to almost be playing himself, he appeared to be a natural guy, who besides seeming to be an all around good guy, was a friend, and a man with integrity (in spite of being a lawyer!), and seemed to pick the play up and carry it around all by himself from time to time.

I saw the HCT performance of "The Producers" and the amazing "Doubt". Not every performance can be that incredibly good, but they offer inspiration for all performers and motivation for the members. There was magic in those great presentations, and the act of creation was also there, as the actors helped each of the audience members take part IN that act of creation amd everybody in that theatre grew and developed into something different than they were at the beginning. This play, about the 34th Street event, is a fun thing, and designed to cheer people who are already happy. And it did well in that role.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Thanks for a well-written review. Years ago I did this for The Hickory News and it's tough to write much that is negative...unless you're in NYC! I will still try to see it. Some shows get an A+...some a C. But the discussion I used to have years ago was "is it better to have NO theatre or BAD theatre." My answer...always... at least with bad theatre you have somewhere to go...UP! Sorry this show didn't have the PUNCH that it needed.

fauxtaographer said...

Hello Anonymous. Well, you never know about community theatre. Many years ago, in Honolulu, I attended a presentation of "The Man of La Mancha" which was on tour with many of its Broadway stars, including Richard Kiley. Two weeks later, I was visiting my sister in Paducah, Kentucky. She had a surprise for me and my wife - the local community theatre was doing "Man of La Mancha". My sister did not know I had just seen the "real thing" two weeks ago. So we went. I was stunned. The Paducah folks were MUCH better. Kiley had seemed a little bored and his dulcinea a little bit distracted. In Paducah, I thought the dulcinea was going to rape her knight on the stage, while he was clearly on his way to some other kind of glory. The rest of the cast picked all this up and so did the audience we ALL hated to leave. Community theatre - it can be magic.