Review Chamber Theatre's Jeeves Intervenes - ThirdCoast Digest
Saturday, August 14, 2010
ThirdCoast Digest
REVIEW: CHAMBER THEATRE'S "JEEVES INTERVENES"
By Matthew Reddin
Crises! A British bachelor faces an undesired engagement. His
best friend is to be forcibly sent to India. The living room needs
dusting.
Quick, ring for Jeeves!
Jeeves Intervenes, Milwaukee Chamber Theatre's season
opener, is based on characters created by British
writer P.G. Wodehouse. Wodehouse wrote an extensive series of
Jeeves stories, about a droll genius of a valet adept at getting
his master, Bertie Wooster, out of any and all scrapes.
Margaret Raether's stage treatment opens with Jeeves (Matt
Daniels) attempting to assist Eustace Bassington-Bassington (Rick
Pendzich), a close friend of Bertie (Chris Klopatek). Eustace, in
danger of being sent to India to learn some business sense, needs
the use of the egregiously-wealthy Bertie's house to impress the
visiting Uncle Rupert (Peter Silbert) who is looking to send him
away.
Bertie has problems of his own: His fierce Aunt Agatha (Laura
Gordon) is coming to town and plans to have him engaged to a young
woman named Gertrude Winklesworth-Bode (Alison Mary Forbes). While
he can't save Bertie from Agatha, Jeeves has managed to schedule
everything just so; Bertie, Gertrude, and his aunt will be out of
town by the time Eustace's uncle arrives, allowing Eustace to pass
off Bertie's flat as his own.
Of course red-faced, blowhard Uncle Rupert shows up early.
The result is comedy that's funny every way you look at it. The
situation itself grows more comic every minute. Eustace falls head
over heels for Gertrude, but when Bertie tries to tell her how
Eustace feels, she takes it as Bertie's proposal of marriage. Then
Uncle Rupert (Silber's reading conjures an image of a British,
nightmarish Teddy Roosevelt) throws Bertie out of his own house, in
a case of mistaken identity that requires a double portion of
Jeeves' ingenuity.
The actors' physical comedy trumps this, though, and might be
the element that elevates this play to a side-busting laughfest.
The actors broadly overplay their their aristocrats, to great
comedic effect. Klopatek and Pendzich are particularly notable for
this, playing off each other and topping levels of ridiculousness
as they shift from friends to foes to friends moment by moment.
As Jeeves, Daniels glides through the chaos and bluster to swoop
in and save Bertie and Eustace from themselves. No hesitation or
worry for Jeeves; the closest he gets to panic comes in the last
moments of the play. He's concerned that the soup tureen might
spill all over the couch.
His manner of speech is an exquisite, consistent mix of irony,
sarcasm and thinly-veiled amusement. Daniels is also funny when
he's not speaking, in something as subtle as the crook of a raised
eyebrow or as unsubtle as the insistent ringing of a gong to get
the attention of his bickering superiors (who are his superiors
only in conventions of social caste).
In the end, Jeeves' machinations ensure that Bertie, Eustace,
and even Gertrude get what they really want. And we get what we
want as well: good comedy.
As Jeeves says, "One endeavors to give satisfaction."
Jeeves Intervenes runs through Aug. 29 at the Broadway
Theatre Center, 158 N. Broadway. For tickets, call the BTC box
office, 414 291-7800, or visit the MCT
website.
http://thirdcoastdigest.com/2010/08/review-chamber-theatres-jeeves-intervenes/
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