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DRAMA QUEENS FROM HELL
By Peter Lefcourt
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Andrew Diego, Paul Galliano, Chad Borden, Christopher Callan, Dee Freeman Photo by Ed Krieger |
The appeal of Drama
Queens from Hell will come from more rehearsal and finding a way to
tighten, tighten, tighten the show up.
Get a bustier and cinch that sucker to the max: one act that speeds through the night
like a drag race on Mulholland Drive.
Playwright Peter Lefcourt, in the critic’s notes, says that he’s
influenced by Christopher Durang, among others and some of that bite rings true
in this inside joke that turns on the idea that some young punk director has
fallen into the rights to do a remake of Billy Wilder’s SUNSET BOULEVARD. At
rise we meet Paul Galliano as Gerard Manville, said director, wrapped in his
burial shroud/toga who announces his own death not unlike William Holden’s
voice over as the writer, Joe Gillis, who is found floating in Norma Desmond’s tepid
pool in the opening scene of Wilder’s movie.
One thing that Billy Wilder knew all about, along with the writing, that made his
films like Sunset Boulevard, The Apartment and, of course, Some Like It Hot so
special is timing and pace. It’s a
given in any dramatic piece that things move along. What director Terri Hanauer
has failed to do with this interpretation of Drama
Queens From Hell has been to remember to keep it moving. This is not a terrible script and certainly the three
Queens (Christopher Callen as Maxine Zabar, Dee Freeman as Felicia Brown and
center stage waving the LBGTQ banner, Chad Borden as TG Brianne McCauley) are
handsomely strutting their stuff as they plot to wangle their way into the
audition to snag the part that Gloria Swanson created as Norma Desmond in this
re-up of the Billy Wilder Classic.
Borden, last seen in a wonderful protean turn in Cloud Nine, at Antaeus, is neither fish
nor fowl representing the Transgender contingency to win the part of Norma. The dichotomy of shaving “her” under
arms while a healthy patch of chest hair peeks through a plunging neckline is
problematic. Camp is the order of the day with Christopher Callen
as Maxine representing the geriatric community pestering her agent, Artie Paramecium (riding the porcelain throne, Rich Podell) who
also represents the other two actresses. Finally, no matter that Norma
Desmond was a famous Caucasian silent
movie star, Ms Freeman rocks in the first audition reading OFF BOOK to an
actual scene from the Wilder film!
The show becomes more stereotypically Camp and spiced way up
when the young director hires his tres gay assistant, Raphael (Andrew Diego), over the top as he should be. Diego
brings the energy of the play up to where it should have been all along. The whole idea of three disparate actresses
vying for a part that only Meryl Streep could bring authenticity to is
silly. The play is silly.
References to inside show business trivia and the current plague on Los
Angeles’s 99 Seat theatre situation will only be understood by a few. Diego
doubling in drag as the German vintage dress salesgirl bubbles everything up
again. Had Ms Hanauer decided to
make it a play with quick changes and even more doubling while keeping it
to one act, the whole thing might have been a champagne cocktail! Light and refreshing!
Playwright Lefcourt’s idea of a good time is lurking somewhere in this production. It’s all in there, screaming to get out! In these days of gender awareness, age discrimination and
boosting the African American more into the spotlight, imagining how Billy
Wilder might have better informed the piece cries for the obvious: Timing! Pace!
Fun!!. Kudos to tech staff especially for the audition scenes where each
actress dubs the lines that Gloria Swanson as Norma Desmond made famous.
There is a very funny play in here. Keep it moving. Keep digging. It’s
in here somewhere.
DRAMA QUEENS FROM
HELL
By Peter Lefcourt
Odyssey Theatre Ensemble
2055 S.
Sepulveda
Los Angeles, CA 90025
Through September 25, 2016
Tickets and Information:
323 960 7787
www.plays411.com/dramaqueens