Chamber Theatre offers valet service to open its season - OnMilwaukee.com
Thursday, August 19, 2010
OnMilwaukee.com
CHAMBER THEATRE OFFERS VALET SERVICE TO OPEN ITS SEASON
By Damien Jaques
Decades before television brought the term "situation comedy"
into our vocabulary, P.G. Wodehouse was writing sitcoms as novels
and short stories. The Englishman was a prolific author who also
penned plays and lyrics for musicals during a career that spanned
more than 70 years.
A practitioner of the "write what you know" maxim, he focused on
British upper-class society from the first half of the 20th
century, and his most enduring character was the preternaturally
competent valet Reginald Jeeves. The manservant first appeared in
print in 1915, and his presence continued in 35 short stories and
11 novels, including Wodehouse's last, "Aunts Aren't Gentlemen,"
published in 1974.
Jeeves existed to look after the young and foppish Bertie
Wooster, a rich and clueless 20-something who was not capable of
extricating himself from embarrassing and nettlesome social and
legal situations. The valet was something of a guardian angel,
manipulating and rescuing Bertie without the young man even
realizing the depths of his dilemmas.
Contemporary American playwright Margaret Raether used the
Wodehouse short story "Jeeves and the Hard-Boiled Egg" as the
foundation for her take on the indomitable valet, titled "Jeeves
Intervenes." The Milwaukee Chamber Theatre, which has historically
had a strong attachment to England, opened an amusing production of
the Raether play last weekend.
Like virtually all sitcoms, "Jeeves Intervenes" relies heavily
on the comic skills of a cast. Although Raether's dialogue is
snappy, the play's characters are caricatures, and the plot is
superficial and predictable. The Chamber Theatre actors are the
ingredient that causes the souffle to rise.
"Jeeves Intervenes" is set in Bertie Wooster's 1926 London flat.
An imperious aunt, a young woman aggressively seeking a husband, a
pompously stuffy former military man and Bertie's equally shiftless
chum Eustace make entrances and exits through two acts. Jeeves is
ever-present, even when not on stage, saving his boss from
calamity, often at the last minute.
The valet is by far the most interesting character. He's a
Renaissance man with an intellectual bent who appears to have an
encyclopedic mind. Toss him a problem and he has a solution.
Matt Daniels glides through the role, oozing proper British
reserve and paternal intelligence. That's funny, because he clearly
is not old enough to be Bertie's father.
Chris Klopatek gets a bit hammy at times in his portrayal of
Bertie, but this style of theater feeds off of large and physical
performances, so he is forgiven. He plays the dopey dandy with the
confident certainty of a master salesman, and some of his comic
antics are gloriously silly.
Veteran Milwaukee Rep actor Peter Silbert makes his Chamber
Theatre debut with deliciously humorous bluster, qualities that
serve his old soldier character very well. His Rep colleague Laura
Gordon (Aunt Agatha) rolls onto the stage with the subtlety and
vulnerability of an armored car. She is an appropriately formidable
object.
Two of Milwaukee's most versatile and under-appreciated young
actors, Alison Mary Forbes and Rick Pendzich, are superbly cast
here. Forbes plays the man-hunting Gertrude Winklesworth-Bode with
proper airs and crisp attitude. Pendzich is the comic epitome of a
trust fund kid with a sense of entitlement.
"Jeeves Intervenes" is an impressive staging accomplishment for
Tami Workentin, whom we know better as an actor than a director.
Workentin found the precise tone necessary for the comedy to work,
she elicited choice performances from the cast, and she pulled all
of the shenanigans together into a neat and entertaining
package.
Special kudos go to designer Kim Instenes, whose vividly
conceived costumes contribute much to the hilarity of the
production.
"Jeeves Intervenes" continues through Aug. 29 in the Cabot
Theatre at the Broadway Theatre Center.
Big Bucks on Broadway
The most expensive show in Broadway history is several steps
closer to opening night. "Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark" began full
rehearsals and ticket sales this week after a delay caused by
financing issues.
The money problems were no surprise. The Broadway buzz is that
the musical's price tag will be around $50 million, much more money
than anyone has ever spent to get a show on its feet.
Originally scheduled to open last winter, "Spider-Man" is being
directed by the wildly imaginative Julie Taymor, who turned "The
Lion King" into a spectacular stage success. U2's Bono and The Edge
wrote the score, their first for Broadway.
Preview performances are scheduled to begin Nov. 14, and the
official opening is set for Dec. 21.
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