Circle X at the Atwater has been invaded by a ‘merry band of
madcap actors’.. more or less.
Anna Nicholas’s Villa Thrilla
bounces off a recent trend of whodunit mystery parties that invite the guests
to solve a heinous crime. Murder
most foul! What works like a charm
in Michael Frayn’s Noises Off! and
Charles Ludlum’s The Mystery of Irma Vep
takes the premise in a slightly different direction.
The theme of the entertainment at The Thrilla Villa (it’s a
creepy old mansion owned by the Thrilla Family in the past) is a 1960s party
complete with shaggadelic Austin Powers look-a-like Zachary (Gregory Gilford
Giles), Carol Wayne Clone “Cleo” (Erica Hanrahan-Ball) and a cast of actors ready
with a script to enact an evening’s entertainment.
At rise we discover a shady couple (Bruce Willis clone Brad
Lee Wind as Tony Bonifacio / Oscar Fazzoli) and his Mercedes Ruehl clone wife,
Donna / Jacqueline: Dayna LaBelle) at the spooky gate to the Thrilla Villa. It’s a
dark and stormy night. Great
lighting and sound by Brandon Baruch and Peter Bayne set the scene as we learn
that Tony and Donna are “connected” Italians (well, Tony is and Donna,
apparently, is simply a browbeaten broad) arriving at the Thrilla Villa in search
of an old acquaintance, “Mickey,” who has had plastic surgery and may be the
connection to acquiring the old manse to take advantage of its New Jersey zoning
for a casino/ entertainment destination.
They know nothing about the murder mystery event, but are welcomed as
though they were expected.
Madison Rhoades' well turned set with scrim walls is
elegantly tacky. Seeing through the
walls seemed to foreshadow something happening behind them. It never did.
Exposition and deliberately broad acting styles include the
punked out and cynical Carolyn (Giulia Davis)
and her suave ‘uncle?’ Fredrick (Steven Connor). The cast attempts to get along with the show with the Bonifacio/Fazzolis totally confused as to what’s going on. All Tony/ Oscar wants to do is find the hidden passage and connect with his old pal, Mickey.
and her suave ‘uncle?’ Fredrick (Steven Connor). The cast attempts to get along with the show with the Bonifacio/Fazzolis totally confused as to what’s going on. All Tony/ Oscar wants to do is find the hidden passage and connect with his old pal, Mickey.
The opportunities for jokes are abundant, but few. The set is loaded with doors
for entrances and exits, but they are never really put to use as we might
expect in a romp like Noises Off! Why
director Gary Lee Reed didn’t at least use the swinging door to the kitchen is
a mystery of its own. Andrew
Villarreal as Tom, the house boy (who may have something going on with Zachary),
camps to high heaven until the plot of the play within the play falls to
pieces. Rosalind (Carolyn Crotty)
as the elegant hostess loses a contact lens, “Mickey” finally surfaces, the
Voice of Doris Roberts is credited as the Voice of Camilla Thrilla, but her
lines are difficult at best to understand… as are the lines of some of the actors, especially in their
guise of characters in the play within the play.
This is a valiant effort at a silly premise, that with some
work might fly through all the available doors a pace. Keeping track of who’s who and the
thread of the plot is reflective of Agatha Christie (Ten Little Indians is
briefly referenced). The fun of
farce is the theatricality of
it. The mad nuttiness of Noises
Off! is missing. The clever use of doubling in Irma Vep is missing, too. With a bit more energy and enunciation
by the actors and really using all those doors, it might become a clever
romp.
VILLA THRILLA
By Anna Nicholas
Produced by Bournos Productions
The Atwater Village Theatre
3269 Casitas Avenue
Los Angeles, CA 90039
Fridays and Saturdays at 8PM
Sundays at 3PM
Through November 23, 2014
Tickets and information
800 838 3006
www.ThrillaVilla.com
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