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Putting Stock in 'Crimes of the Heart'
From: Los Angeles Times 10/22/99
By: Michael Phillips
Along with buggy whips, vaudeville and eight-track tapes,
old-fashioned star-driven summer stock is a thing of
decades past. Isn't it?
Why no, it isn't. It's somewhat alive and generally
middling in 1999 Los Angeles.
Director Garry Marshall's production of "Crimes
of the Heart" features Faith Ford, best known for "Murphy
Brown"; Crystal Bernard of "Wings"; and
Morgan Fairchild, lately on "Friends" and the
odd Old Navy ad. The production inaugurates the first
full season of Marshall's own Falcon Theatre in Burbank.
Marshall's resume includes such two-word gold mines as "Happy
Days," "Pretty Woman" and "Runaway
Bride," along with a smattering of theater.
Thing is, I like summer stock, star-driven or otherwise.
Unto itself it's a grand 20th century tradition of breathless,
under-rehearsed, escapist theater, trading in well-worn
titles and game performers laboring hard.
Here, they're laboring too hard.
Marshall's production also feels a bit like a taping
of a TV series based on "Crimes of the Heart." The
performances, some pretty good, some pretty lame, tend
to divide Beth Henley's 20-year-old comedy into the theatrical
equivalent of close-ups and reaction shots. It's every
seriocomic Southern kook for herself up there.
Henley's play won the Pulitzer Prize and became her
most profitable work to date. (It also became the overcooked
1986 film of the same name.) The material remains rock-solid
yet disarmingly relaxed. It depicts a family reunion
under duress in a small Mississippi town. Babe (Bernard)
has shot her abusive husband. One sister, Lenny (Ford),
is about to crack, having taken care of their grandfather
for a too-long a spell without much help. The other sister,
Meg (Stephanie Niznik, in an arch, check-these-out poseur's
performance), has returned from L.A. to rally 'round
the McGrath clan. Cousin Chick (Fairchild, passable but
indistinct) provides plenty of insensitivity and moral
rigidity for contrast. And, as coiffed for this production,
Fairchild's helmet hair provides something akin to the
San Onofre nuclear power plant. Without the nob on top.
Ford fares best. She repeats certain small-scale physical
bits--the sudden, ineffectual arm-flailing chief among
them--but there's a core of comic honesty in her playing.
Bernard gets by on charm and easygoing timing, though
too often, she takes such sweet time with her cue pickups
it's as if she isn't sure who has what line next.
The prime over-actor is Jake Wall, playing Babe's defense
attorney Barnette Lloyd (the role originated by Peter
MacNicol). Playwright Henley called for an "intelligent
young man with an almost fanatical intensity." Wall's
small-town lawyer is a preadolescent dork, period. Cast
straight out of Hunk Central, Paul Satterfield fares
well enough as Doc Porter, Meg's old flame--although
the second-act reunion scene, as acted by Satterfield
and Niznik, is a classic illustration of how externals
and overeagerness and "playing one thing while feeling
another" can clutter up a scene but good.
The production is more uninspired than cluttered, in
the main. Marshall obviously knows his comedy, and though
everyone in this production seems to be in little productions
of their own, there's considerable comic talent on view.
But the Falcon can do better. |