Colin Laurence reviews Don't Dress For Dinner

    Don't Dress for Dinner
    by Marc Camoletti
    performed by Waterbeach Community Players
    directed by Mark Easterfield

    More years ago than I care to remember I saw the original London production of Marc Camoletti's BOEING BOEING which, incidentally WCP presented in 1980. My visit to Waterbeach reacquainted me with this French playwright's work and in doing so reminded me just how well his humour translates into English.

    Director Mark Easterfield had assembled a first-rate cast who obviously had a clear idea of how to approach this very convoluted piece of theatre. The plot is too complex to go into here. The play is set in a chic converted barn outside Paris and contains a more than adequate supply of mistaken identities, extra-marital affairs and characters who (literally) at times fall over themselves to avoid being found out. However, this is not an ordinary farce in as much as it isn't out of the 'foot-on-the-gas-and keep-going' stable. Far from it, for if it were to be played at that pace those watching it would be left far behind and wondering what exactly it was they'd just seen. Instead it requires exactly what this company gave it, several respites from the ever-increasing confusion in order to allow the audience to draw a collectively well-deserved breath.

    Garry Fowler (Bernard) was the lynchpin of the show. His smug manner at the outset when he thought he'd arranged the perfect overnight liaison with his mistress, Julia Thompson (Suzanne) and his subsequent disintegration as his plans turned to dust was a delight to see. Christine Gilsenan (as his wife, Jacqueline) nicely illustrated her ability to change from the confident and slightly suspicious partner to the outraged mistress when she thought that her secret lover Robert (Stephen Smith) had gone off the rails. Steve Smith's descent into his personal hell was executed most effectively, as Robert became more embroiled in the subterfuge, pausing only to empty a vodka bottle and his wallet along the way. Julia Thompson (as Suzanne) elegantly strolled into the fray and unwittingly finished up cooking dinner wearing an evening dress and apron ensemble. Her unfazed acceptance of the events was well timed. The other key player in all of this, Jane Stewart as the not altogether dippy Suzette, the cook-that-never-was gave a performance, which was pitched at just the right level and never strayed into the absurd. Completing the cast was WCP veteran, Chris Shinn (as Suzette's monosyllabic husband, George). He demonstrated the character's initial dimness very well and his change of heart once he realised that he could benefit from the situation.

    The set and properties were well chosen as too were the costumes, although I did think that both Bernard and Robert could have been dressed more sharply. I liked the dinner-style theatre seating which gave the audience (well, me at least) the opportunity of enjoying a glass of wine during the performance. The front-of-house staff, who are quite often overlooked, were on good form helping create the right ambience for the evening.

    This was a very good presentation of a well-written farce. It was approached and delivered in a stylish way with no discernible weaknesses in the production. It certainly had all the right ingredients - in the right order. An extremely enjoyable evening all round.

    Waterbeach Theatre Company
    All performances at
    Waterbeach School
    Cambridge CB25 9JU

    Contact:
    Phone: 01223 880023
    Email: secretarywtc@icloud.com

    Discover us on:
    Facebook
    Twitter

    Buy tickets from:
    Online:www.ticketsource.co.uk/wcp
    Phone: 01223 880023

    WTC is a member of the National Operatic and Dramatic Association (NODA) www.noda.org.uk.

    Read our Data Privacy
    policy here.

    主站蜘蛛池模板: 新化县| 永州市| 新丰县| 马尔康县| 时尚| 肇东市| 平乐县| 巴里| 泾川县| 迭部县| 大冶市| 云龙县| 黄浦区| 沂南县| 遂溪县| 安阳县| 宾阳县| 鹤山市| 万年县| 罗山县| 洪雅县| 咸宁市| 乡宁县| 西宁市| 合山市| 永春县| 寿宁县| 合水县| 云林县| 洛阳市| 栾城县| 久治县| 宁津县| 永平县| 隆尧县| 平舆县| 贵定县| 迁安市| 辽阳市| 齐齐哈尔市| 大石桥市|