Comedy, drama intertwine in ‘Lovers at Versailles’
Tom Titus
Playgoers attending the American premiere of “Lovers at Versailles”
at the Laguna Playhouse may expect to see a story set in France
against the backdrop of a certain palace. Hopefully, they won’t be
too disappointed to find that the characters -- all but one anyway --
never really get out of Dublin, Ireland.
Irish playwright Bernard Farrell is “being cute” with his title,
basing it on one character’s misunderstanding of a lyric from the
Frank Sinatra melody “Strangers in the Night.” It’s just one of a
series of mistaken assumptions involving a character’s name (David or
Daniel) and his destination (Finland or Iceland).
“Lovers at Versailles” actually centers on the death of an Irish
shopkeeper and its effect on his wife and two daughters -- especially
the unmarried one, whose matrimonial plans are derailed by the
hypochondriac mother. The characters undergo some deadly serious
transitions -- they just happen to be roaringly funny -- in this
lengthy but quite satisfying production directed by Andrew Barnicle.
Farrell’s characters have quite a bit on their plates, and they
devour it with gusto. Past and present intertwine with almost
predictable regularity as we see what life with the late father was
like, and what his passing has done to the family.
In the center of this tragicomic maelstrom is Kelley Hazen as the
single daughter, and she delivers a bravura, multi-layered
performance. In a scenario resembling South Coast Repertory’s recent
“Proof,” Hazen enacts the daughter closest to her father who’s
fearful of inheriting from him an absent-mindedness bordering on
Alzheimer’s disease.
Marcia Rodd is excellent as a chain-smoking, domineering mother
stunned by the revelation of some secret love letters squirreled away
in the old man’s possessions. Her other daughter is a volatile
presence enacted with volcanic determination by Rebecca Dines, whose
primary concern is the antics of her dullard, sports nut of a
husband.
The latter role is enriched by Richard Ashton, with Hazen’s one of
the two supreme performances of the show. Ashton excels as a soccer
fanatic with little between his ears who seems never to say the right
thing at the proper time. His donnybrook with Dines late in the show
is priceless.
Joe Medalis demonstrates the fine art of skillful underplaying as
the late father who keeps returning in a series of flashbacks (again,
similar to “Proof”) and offers sage, if slightly addled, advice.
Kevin Black earnestly presents Hazen’s woodworking suitor who uses
the occasion of a funeral to try for a second change at romance.
Rounding out the company are two actresses who contribute lively
cameos late in the production -- Carolyn A. Palmer as a perky news
reporter and Rende Rae Norman as one who holds an important key to
the plot. Her appearance is an inspired bit of playwriting.
The action is beautifully played out on Dwight Richard Oodles’
expansive working-class living room set, behind which is the father’s
store, seen only through a scrim. Julie Keen’s costumes and Paulie
Jenkins’ lighting are very effective contributions.
This is Farrell’s third American premiere in Laguna, all directed
by Barnicle, and the pair obviously have an excellent working
relationship. The slices of comedy sandwiched in between dramatic
moments is splendidly accomplished by both artists.
“Lovers at Versailles” is a spirited journey through emotional
waters, roiled by surprisingly meaty chunks of inspired hilarity.
It’s a beautiful example of what can happen when people get their
Irish up.
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