Theater
Tom Titus
When life gives you lemons, you make lemonade. When the stage on which
you’re scheduled to present an evening of original plays is covered with
sand, you create a collection of “Beach Plays.”
The New Voices Playwrights Workshop found itself in such a sandy
situation Sunday night, since its base of operations, the Costa Mesa
Civic Playhouse, has been turned into a beach for the production of
“Coastal Disturbances.” But the New Voices folks are nothing if not
adaptable.
“The Beach Plays,” a half-dozen vignettes situated on the shoreline,
demonstrated the skills of the playwrights’ group in creating theater for
specific venues. They had written for such occasions previously with
plays centered on Christmas and Valentine’s Day.
Of the six short plays presented Sunday night, the blue- ribbon
winner, at least from this corner, was “The Sands of Discontent” by the
newest of the New Voices, John Bolen, and directed by his wife, Lynne.
The play examined the age-old theme of lost love and potential
reconciliation without becoming either trite or overstated.
The man and woman involved (played by Carl Kline and Karen Chapin)
have just finished a movie project and, as they stroll the beach outside
the site of the cast party, they reminisce on their earlier, failed
relationship with honesty and believability.
Additionally, both actors were “off book,” lending further credibility
to the piece in a night of staged readings. “Beach Baby,” written and
directed by New Voices founder Christopher Trela, is a witty account of a
directionless guy (Greg Lipford) and a pregnant, but unmarried, woman
(Kimberly Wind) who meet and chat, without any semblance of flirtation,
yet with a hint that they’ll meet again. Her line concerning her departed
lover, “I didn’t think he was the man I wanted visiting my kid every
other weekend,” sums up her view of the permanence of romance.
Playwright Stephen Ludwig takes a big page out of David Mamet’s book
with “Big Al at the Beach,” which appears quite derivative of the final
scene of “Sexual Perversity in Chicago.”
Here the loquacious, hedonistic Al (David Beatty) revels and drools
over the pulchritudinous beach scenery, but it’s his reticent buddy (Eric
Eisenbrey) with his one-syllable responses who ultimately scores with
beach bunny Rachel Davenport.
In “The Naked Truth,” playwright John Lane presents a similar
situation, two guys on the prowl, but this time it’s at a nude beach. How
to approach the situation and the shy guy’s apprehension at baring his
own manhood are the chuckle-inducing situations plumbed by Lipford and
Rudi Jurado.
“Hourglass” by Tom Swimm contains tragic overtones, as the couple
involved (Michael Buss and Lisa Liken) appear to be the sole survivors of
a boating accident. The apparent infidelity of one of the parties
heightens the solemnity of the occasion.
Finally, “Ring of Truth,” written and directed by Buss, focuses on a
honeymooning couple whose bliss sours when his wedding ring turns up
missing. Both the conflict and the resolution are somewhat manufactured,
but the performances of Jurado and Theresa Reid are lively and involving.
The New Voices Playwrights Workshop is conducting a fund-raising drive
in the hopes of becoming the New Voices Playwrights Theater, with a home
base in which to produce both short and full-length plays. Those seeking
further information can contact the group at (949) 225-4125.
For now, the Civic Playhouse is home, and the next New Voices project
will be a two-weekend engagement titled “The Bed Plays,” stories centered
around that particular piece of furniture. Performance dates are March
25-26 and April 1-2.
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