Theater Review
Tom Titus
In the movie “The Wild One” nearly 50 years ago, Marlon Brando’s biker
character was asked what he was rebelling against. His glib answer:
“Whattya got?”
The same reply could be given by playwright James McLure, were he to be
quizzed on what he was satirizing in his revamping of John O’Keefe’s 18th
century comedy “Wild Oats.” You name it, McLure jabs it in his potpourri
western comic melodrama now unfolding on the stage of OCC’s Drama Lab
Theater.
Several seasons ago, South Coast Repertory staged the Revolutionary
War-era original. McLure’s version may be more of a juvenile, popcorn
farce, but it’s also somewhat funnier as long as you go with the spirit
of it and leave your sophistication at the door.
Director Alexander Golson and what seems like a cast of thousands have
delved into the “Dumb and Dumber” vein for some outrageously effective
pieces of farcical stagecraft. McLure’s play is a thinly disguised
melodrama that pokes fun at its genre, and Golson has elicited some
decidedly over-the-top performances from his enthusiastic players, some
of which border on the grotesque.
“Wild Oats” is set in the town of Muleshoe, Texas -- which must be fairly
close to Oklahoma, where the corn is as high as an elephant’s eye. Here,
two itinerant actors are endeavoring to transport culture to the prairie,
resulting in the energetic entwinement of Shakespeare and slapstick.
Meanwhile, a bombastic cavalry colonel is seeking the son he never knew,
a heiress is fending off an avaricious clergyman and a dastardly rancher
is plotting nefarious schemes aided by a trio of Army deserters. The
dialogue is replete with “groaners,” but it’s still quite a lot of fun.
OCC instructor David Scaglione is a particular hoot as the colonel whose
bombast is more fearsome than his bite. The key performance in the show,
however, is turned in by Alecs Vildosola as his trusty aide -- half
Irish, half Indian and all rambunctious hilarity with the comic timing of
Groucho Marx and the manic energy of Jim Carrey.
Michael Cavinder takes the spotlight as the Shakespeare-spouting thespian
(naturally, the show makes comic use of that term) who falls for the
young heiress believed to be his cousin, Tracy Downs as a Westerner whose
immersion in Eastern culture didn’t take. Their scenes propel the action
without stinting on the comedy.
The duplicitous preacher is done with villainous relish by George
Rothman, while Hugh Goodearl munches large chunks of scenery as the
ballistic rancher. Richie Ruggiero as his brain-dead son could be the
village idiot of several villages and Danae Michelle Hanson eagerly
discovers “sluttishness” as his previously sheltered daughter.
Dropping in now and then to swipe scene after scene are “lighting
inventors” Kliegle and Leako, played much like the comic villains in an
old James Bond movie by Sean Gray and James McGinnis. Shawn Shryver,
Brandon “Scooby” Jones and Travis Woods raise havoc as the deserters and
Stephen Moore is effective as Cavinder’s stage companion.
There’s also a subplot involving a Mexican farmer (Mark Hunt) and his
sad-eyed sister (Pamela Russell), which eventually contributes heavily to
the story, as well as some egregious comic overplaying by an actor
identified only as Broos. Anna Jackson and Janeen Rene Gronsky add some
sweet voices to the mixture, backed by musical director Terence Alaric at
the piano.
“Wild Oats” is indeed quite wild -- one of those comedies where the
first rule is “let it all hang out.” The company follows this admonition
to the letter.WHAT: “Wild Oats”
WHERE: OCC Drama Lab Theater, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa MesaWHEN: Closing
performances today through Saturday at 8 p.m., Sunday at 2 p.m.HOW MUCH:
$6 to $9PHONE: (714) 432-5880
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