Theater Review
Tom Titus
George Bernard Shaw’s ‘The Philanderer’ is truly a play for the ‘90s --
the 1890s, that is. Only through the magic of South Coast Repertory’s
immaculate production does it become a relevant exercise for audiences
braced for the new millennium.
Visiting the realm of Shaw -- which SCR has done with regularity over the
past 35 years -- requires a bit of mental conditioning. The playwright
places his characters on soap boxes (literally, in the case of ‘The
Philanderer’) to expound on his philosophies of socialism, feminism and
just about any other available ‘ism.’
In director David Emmes’ admirable staging, set against the backdrop of
John Iacovelli’s three imposing settings, this little-known work from the
playwright’s earliest period becomes an elegant treatise on the art of
romance. An exceedingly capable cast breathes passionate life into Shaw’s
19th century characters.
The play’s raciest scene is performed as the first lights go up,
revealing the title character (Douglas Weston) engaged in a passionate
embrace with his new love (Kaitlin Hopkins) before being interrupted by
an old flame (Nancy Bell) who refuses to be extinguished. This is the
closest Shaw comes to visceral depictions before shifting into a
philosophical gear.
The fathers of both ladies (SCR veterans Richard Doyle and Don Took)
arrive to lend a new dimension to the triangle, and soon the scene shifts
to the domain of another playwright, Henrik Ibsen, a Shaw contemporary
venerated by the playwright and virtually all of his characters.
The ‘Ibsen Club,’ to which most of the principals belong, promotes the
social values and ideals of Hedda Gabler and Nora Torvald, emancipated
women far ahead of their time.
There we encounter the play’s most interesting character, the incredibly
self-centered doctor (Francois Giroday) who pursues Bell when not
agonizing that modern medicine has debunked one of his disease
discoveries (never mind that it relieves Doyle’s character of the specter
of imminent termination).
Also aboard is Bell’s mannish younger sister (Lynsey Mcleod), who has
taken Ibsenism to its illogical conclusion.
This excellent cast tackles Shaw’s intellectual gyrations and renders
them an enjoyable experience -- a formidable task performed with
seemingly effortless grace.
Weston bobs and weaves like a promising middleweight as he sidesteps
Bell’s affections in his pursuit of Hopkins’ while Bell gives vent to the
play’s only true element of emotionalism and does so beautifully.
Doyle’s retired military officer rages against the dying of the light
wonderfully before realizing the fates aren’t stacked against him, while
Took’s low-key responses are delivered in sharp counterpoint. Giroday
takes his insufferably pompous character to ridiculous lengths and Mcleod
is a snappish caricature of Shaw’s ‘manly woman.’
‘The Philanderer’ is a splendid opening gambit in South Coast Repertory’s
36th season, glittering with professional polish in all departments. Shaw
never ran out of words or ideas, and SCR seemingly has yet to run out of
Shaw’s plays.
CUTLINE: Douglas Weston is caught between the woman he pursues (Kaitlin
Hopkins, at right) and the one who pursues him (Nancy Bell) in George
Bernard Shaw’s ‘The Philanderer’ at South Coast Repertory.
WHAT: ‘The Philanderer’WHERE: South Coast Repertory, 655 Town Center
Drive, Costa Mesa
WHEN: Tuesdays through Fridays at 8 p.m., Saturdays at 2:30 and 8,
Sundays at 2:30 and 7:30 through Oct. 10
HOW MUCH: $28 to $47
PHONE: (714) 708-5555
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