‘The Irish Curse’
opens at New Milford’s TheatreWorks
By David Begelman
Theater Critic
The
premise of Martin Casella’s comedy “The Irish Curse” is that the presumably
unfortunate genetic condition of having a small penis is reason enough to
organize a support group whose five members can grouse about the blight that
has brought them down at every turn in life.
The
theme may be fodder for some stand-up comedian’s occasional quips, but a full
length play? Evidently, the tide of critical opinion since the debut of the
comedy at the New York International Fringe Festival in 2005 has it that
Casella’s ode to the idea that size matters is indeed a successful venture. It
has been hailed as a “scathingly funny and poignant modern comedy” by some or
“sharp,” “delightful,” “wonderful theater,” whose characters are “well drawn
and immensely endearing.”
The
sour critical notes—largely in the minority—are mordantly negative: “Mind-numbingly
stupid,” or “ham-fisted,” “clichéd” and
“formulaic.” Playwright Casella, it seems, may also be cursed with a genetic
failing: an inability to stimulate critical opinions other than those at the extreme
poles of positive or negative reaction. The former category of response was
obviously in evidence at the opening night of the play at New Milford’s
TheatreWorks. Audiences clearly were having a good time of it—judging by the
howls of laughter that greeted what was happening on stage.
There
is no denying Casella’s gift for humorous one-liners, with which “The Irish
Curse” abounds. But there are stretches in the play that cause one to wince at
the crassness of the dialogue, as when assessments of anatomical size make the
rounds invidiously through comparisons of ethnic groups from eastern Europeans
to African-Americans.
Another
play vaguely reminiscent of Casella’s comedy, Jason Miller’s “That Championship
Season,” likewise contains broadsides against Jews, Poles, Italians,
African-Americans and women. Even while expressing the attitudes of fictional
characters, they are delivered like cannon shots, the response to them often being
on the shamefaced side.
In
“The Irish Curse” five Irish-American men convene as a support group in the
basement of the St. Sebastian Catholic Church in Brooklyn Heights. Father
Shaunessy (Glenn R. Couture) leads them in ventilating about how their meager
anatomies have disadvantaged them.
Efforts
to come to terms with being less endowed take the form of disparate coping
strategies within the group, from padding the trousers or becoming abstinent to
contemplating suicide
Rick
(James Hipp), is a braggart in a long relationship with a woman despite a
roving eye, Stephen (Michael Wright) is a gay and promiscuous undercover NYPD
cop, Joseph (Jonathan Ross), whose wife has abandoned him and his daughters,
traces his misfortune to biology being destiny, and Keiran (Charles Roth), a
newcomer to the group, is on the verge of a meltdown fantasizing that his true
love will come to reject him because of his diminutive member.
All
of director Robin Frome’s performers put in credible characterizations in a
script much like our redoubtable, even if undersized, organ. It has its ups and
its downs.
“The Irish Curse” runs through March 24 at
New Milford’s TheatreWorks, 5 Brookside Avenue, New Milford. Performances are
Friday and Saturday 8:00 p.m., with a Sunday matinee on March 18 at 2:00 p.m.
Tickets are $20 and may be purchased by called the box office at 860-350-6863
or online at WWW.THEATREWORKS.US.
No comments:
Post a Comment