‘Seascape’ is
masterful at TheatreWorks
By David Begelman
Theater Critic
Kudos have to be extended
to director Chesley Plemmons and his capable cast for the current performance
of Edward Albee’s “Seascape” at New Milford’s Theatre Works. The production,
right down to the eye-catching Set Design by Glenn Couture and Richard
Pettibone, is another memorable event in the history of this community
production company.
And it’s no surprise that playwright Albee’s first
off-Broadway hit “The Zoo Story” was double-billed with Samuel Beckett’s
“Krapp’s Last Tape.” Comparisons between the two dramatists are inevitable. The
set design for “Seascape” could have doubled for the one in “Happy Days:” a
stretch of sandy beach spread out against an unforgiving sky.
What is more, Albee and Beckett have both hit upon
similar kinds of conceits clashing dramatically with seemingly routine or
inconsequential dialogue. In “Happy Days,” Winnie and Willie chatter on about
this or that while she is buried in sand up to her waist in the first act, and
discovered up to her neck in sand in the second.
In “Seascape,” Nancy (Noel Desiato) and Charlie (J.
Scott Williams) prate on about old and new experiences, self-actualization, and
marital crises while a pair of humanoid lizard creatures (James Hipp and
Desirae Carle) in from the sea shatter the homespun aspect of their private
moments together.
So both Beckett and Albee are masters at taking the
action to new existential levels by introducing devices guaranteed to change
the dramatic landscape altogether. But in “Seascape” Albee, more than Beckett,
has the advantage of a keener sense of humor.
The lizard people, Leslie and Sarah, speak English.
But the phylogenetic differences between them and Nancy and Charlie are huge.
Attempting to understand human foibles, or, conversely, reptilian ways and
idioms, is at the heart of the comedy’s appeal for audiences. What Beckett’s
play lacks, Albee’s “Seascape” provides in profusion: delicious ironies wrought
by the attempts of two different species to get on the same wave-length of
understanding.
Noel Desiato (arguably our leading area actress)
was outstanding as Nancy, a wife whose need for new life experiences and
animated attempts to engage her husband were unremitting. J. Scott Williams as
Charlie exuded patience and a lower-key enthusiasm for life (except when he was
recalling how as a younger boy he could used stones to sink to the bottom of a
pool or lake and remain there).
James Hipp as Leslie puts in what is probably his
best community theater performance as the lizard from the sea who is forever
bemused by human ways, to the point of occasional consternation and ire.
Desirae Carle as Sarah provided an attractive stark
contrast to Hipp’s lizard man, and one that on occasion mirrored Nancy’s not so
invisible attempts to hassle her husband.
Set Design by Glen Couture and Richard Pettibone
was, as usual, a thing of beauty, as was Lesley Neilson Bowman’s Costume
Designs for lizards. Komodo dragons, eat your hearts out! Director Plemmons and
his cast and backstage crew are what community theater should be about. Bravo!
“Seascape” runs through May 25 at New Milford’s
TheatreWorks, 5 Brookside Avenue, New Milford. Performances are Friday and
Saturday 8 p.m. with a Sunday matinee on May 19 at 2 p.m. Tickets are $23 for
reserved seating and may be purchased by calling the box office at 860-350-6863
or online at www.theatreworks.us.
David
Begelman is a freelance writer in Connecticut; begelman33@gmail.com
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