20 little Indians hit local stages
Tom Titus
There is, as they say, a first time for everything.
In nearly four decades of chronicling the local theater scene,
I’ve often encountered the same play being presented by two or more
different theater groups during the same season.
Once, a few years ago, I sat through three productions of “Steel
Magnolias” in a six-week period. (One I was obliged to review, the
other two, outside the paper’s coverage area, featured a good friend
and a good daughter in the respective casts, also demanding my
attention.)
Never, however, in my experience has there been an occasion to
review the same play opening the same weekend at two local theaters.
That’s what’s on tap this weekend with what I like to refer to as
“20 Little Indians.”
The Huntington Beach Playhouse and the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse
decided that Agatha Christie’s 1940s-era mystery thriller “Ten Little
Indians” would be an ideal play to present around Halloween. Neither,
of course, consulted the other; why would they?
The result is that the Huntington Beach version has its grand
opening tonight, and I’ll be viewing it for the Huntington Beach
Independent. Costa Mesa’s will be Saturday, and will be reviewed in
the Independent’s sister paper, the Daily Pilot, next week.
As General Custer once said, “Where did all those bleeping Indians
come from?”
Actually, there are no Native Americans in Christie’s whodunit.
The title comes from a musical ditty, much like her play “The
Mousetrap” found its titular reference in the song “Three Blind
Mice.”
The plot is a familiar one, lampooned on stage and screen (“Murder
by Death,” “Something’s Afoot,” etc.). Ten people, strangers to one
another, are invited to spend an evening on a fog-shrouded island cut
off from civilization, and one by one, they start expiring.
Who’ll be the last one standing? Well, for that answer, you’ll
have to see the show -- either in Costa Mesa or Huntington Beach.
David Colwell, who’s directing the local version, naturally hopes
you’ll check out the Civic Playhouse.
“The plays of Agatha Christie have a rock-solid technique and
structure,” he said. “And I find [and I think audiences find] their
formal similarities comforting and the working out of Dame Agatha’s
scrupulously planned plots reassuring.
“Mostly, they are popular because they are tremendous fun to
watch,” he said. “And in the theater, a Christie plot is especially
entertaining -- there it is, being worked out in front of you in
[more or less] real time. In a book, you can flip back; in a film,
you’re not in the same room with the killer and victim; in the
theater, you’ve got it all, right now, right in front of you.”
Colwell points out that Christie reworked the climax of her 1939
novel “And Then There Were None” to create the play, retitled “Ten
Little Indians.” It became a big hit in London and New York during
the 1943-44 season.
“Christie decided the stage demanded a more romantic ‘happy
ending’ and revised accordingly,” Colwell said. “Many film versions
followed, the best by far being Rene Clair’s wonderful film ‘And Then
There Were None.’ The film versions retain the ending Christie
invented for the stage -- sometimes surprising those audience members
who know the novel’s different, very chilling conclusion.
“Our production of ‘Ten Little Indians’ incorporates some of the
changes and embellishments first used in the movie ‘And Then There
Were None,’” Colwell says.
The Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse version of “Ten Little Indians,”
opening this weekend, will be staged weekends through Nov. 23 with
performances Thursdays through Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 2
p.m. The theater is at 611 Hamilton St., Costa Mesa. For
reservations, call (949) 650-5269.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Fridays.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.