‘Habeas Corpus’ is hedonistic hilarity at SCR
Tom Titus
Back in the early 1970s, South Coast Repertory was pushing the
artistic envelope with newer, farther-out plays, a good share of them
with a British accent. How the company missed Alan Bennett’s “Habeas
Corpus” is anybody’s guess.
But, better late than never. SCR has latched onto Bennett’s
raunchy 1973 English farce and has transformed it into the funniest
show you’ll see on any local stage this year, or perhaps any year in
memory. It’s simply knockdown, drag-out, falling-down farcical.
Bennett -- who cut his satirical teeth as a member of England’s
“Beyond the Fringe” troupe, which included Peter Cook and Dudley
Moore, some four decades ago -- wrote “Habeas Corpus” about the same
time his countryman, Joe Orton, was creating “What the Butler Saw,” a
similar sort of sex farce, accenting the medical profession and its
weaknesses of (and for) the flesh. It’s a tossup, which is funnier,
but “Habeas Corpus” is a galloping piece of hedonistic hilarity
calculated to split your stitches.
Originally intended to be performed without scenery, the SCR
version benefits from the imaginative scenic design of Christopher
Acebo -- a series of carpet-covered anthills, which serve various
functions in director Bill Rauch’s wildly accelerated production. One
such mound even opens to reveal a portrait of Queen Elizabeth in her
decidedly younger days.
As in “Butler,” the centerpiece of “Habeas Corpus” is a randy
physician with an eye for the nubile young ladies, a role splendidly
interpreted at SCR by company veteran Hal Landon Jr. The primary
object of his affection, not to mention several others’, is Lynsey
McLeod, who spends a good portion of the play (also as in “Butler”)
only partially clothed.
Caitlin O’Connell is a study in comic elegance as the good
doctor’s wife who’s being pursued by an old flame, the head of the
English medical society. Patrick Kerr fills this role, that of Sir
Percy Shorter, and his limited stature, matching his surname, leads
to countless jibes and double entendres.
The progeny of the doctor and his wife are a frustrated pair --
Christopher Liam Moore is a hypochondriac son convinced he has a
fatal disease and Kate A. Mulligan is their plain, shapeless daughter
who discovers a new, exciting social life when she dons her
mail-order breast implants.
Mulligan is pursued with ecclesiastical vigor by Daniel T. Parker
as the local clergyman dubbed “Canon Throbbing,” offering the play’s
funniest line (only in the light of more recent transgressions in the
clerical ranks). Richard Doyle stumbles around, pantsless, through
most of the proceedings, adding dollops of risque comedy, while
Phillip C. Vaden is a hoot as a frustrated patient bent on suicide.
All this is, indeed, hilarious, but there are two other elements
to Bennett’s play that really kick the comic temperature into
overdrive. Jane Carr is outrageously funny as “Mrs. Swabb,” the
doctor’s erstwhile assistant who doubles brilliantly as the play’s
sly narrator. And Lynnda Ferguson, absent for all but the last few
seconds of the first act, captures the stage in the second as a
titled lady whose lone indiscretion during the London blitz produced
McLeod’s character.
One other stylistic element propels the SCR comedy -- Bennett has
written much of his dialogue in rhyme, so that the piece plays much
like a Shakespearean comedy, but modernized with such lines as “Don’t
tell me you wouldn’t, given the choice / Old men with schoolgirls,
ladies with boys.”
Director Rauch has pulled out all the comedic stops to offer SCR
audiences a rampantly hilarious bundle from Britain that has been far
too long in arriving on our shore. Also, if you remember the late
1960s and early ‘70s, you’ll get an additional belt out of Paul James
Prendergast’s nostalgic musical background.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Fridays.
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