“I Got The Horse Right Here…” Oops, wrong show but right era.
Hang in there for another look at some of the colorful characters from the
short Stories of Damon Runyon’s al la “Guys And Dolls” in the form of “Another
Roll Of The Dice” now in a world premiere performance at North Coast Repertory
Theatre’s final show of its 37th season, through Aug 11th.
In a time when the world is topsy-turvy Mark Saltzman’s book
with music and lyrics from Frank Loesser’s playbook and with keen direction and
choreography by Larry Sousa, this brand new “Another Roll Of The Dice” is a
welcome relief from reality.
Jason Maddy, Allison Sprat Pearce, Darrick Penny, Lance Carter, Elliot Lazar and Sarah Errington |
For those “Guys And Dolls” fans (put me at the top of the
list) you might find these Runyonesque type gangsta characters from “ROD”
familiar: there’s no Harry The Horse, but there is ‘Tobias The Terrible’
Tweeney, Speed Gilroy, Armond Fiebleman (Elliot Lazar) or Haystack Duggle, Joey
Uptown, Sammy The shirt, (Jason Maddy), Moose
Moran, Monotone Milano, Jabez Thursday (Lance Carter), Snooksy Perkle, Georgia
St. George, Fiona Fitch, Amelia Bodkin, Baseball Hattie (Allison Spratt
Pearce), Zelma the Waitress, Deborah Weems, Valeria Acarwater, Mitzi Two Shoes
(Sarah Errington) and Ledge Dugan, Leo The Soda Jerk, Lieutenant Delvaney and
Phillies Fan (Derrick Penny).
Allison Spratt Pearce and Jason Maddy |
The talented and excellent cast is pretty
busy changing roles and shifting characters all in a flash of an eyelash and
dressed to characterize each shady type by Elsa Benzoni. Not that you will be
counting but just as an FYI the cast of six play thirty characters and each one
is more…well lets just say out of Runyon’s playbook and that’s what makes them
so appealing.
Elliot Lazar and Sarah Errington |
Three vignettes are played out in Mindy’s Deli narrated by
Zelma the waitress as the guys slink in and out with meetings arranged and
deals made and broken with a look, a wave of the hand or the nozzle of some
hardware. Each has a story and each story is loosely connected to another as
the characters cross over and become part of another hijinks or robbery or
whatever mess they create for themselves.
Some are more comical than others. Eliot Lazar’s Tobias Tweeney
is by far the most transitional as the nerdy Rutgers graduate in love with
Zelma (“I Wish I Didn’t Love You So”) who is moving to the dark side and wants
her future boyfriends to be more like the underworld creatures she sees coming
into the Deli.
Allison Sprat Pearce and Elliot Lazar |
For Tobias, his first lesson in love and life comes in the
form of meeting up with Georgia in her dressing room where she gives him his
first dancing lesson. Allison Spratt Pearce a stunning performer in her own
right is the night -club singer who puts Tobias to the moves and, in a segment
you won’t forget, he is without a doubt an excellent but deer in the headlights student. She also teaches him the ways of smooching, dancing and
whatever it takes to land him is doll. (“Why Fight The feeling?”)
As ‘luck has it he snags himself a job with the mob as their
getaway driver and Zelma is smitten with the now Tobias The Terrible. Both
Pearce and Errington show of their chops to the tunes of ‘The Boys In The
Backroom” (Frederick Hollander), and ‘Why Fight The Feeling” (Loesser).
Allison Spratt Pearce as Baseball Hattie |
Pearce is also outstanding as the Baseball cheering “Baseball
Hattie” who gets jilted by her baseball hero Jason Maddy’s Haystack Duggler
(“Let’s Get Lost”, Jimmy McHough) who has eyes for anyone in his sight.
Jason Maddy plays four or five different undergrounds with a
wink and a nod and his larger than life persona pumps life into every one. But
Haystack is the darkest as he abuses his wife and cheats right under her nose
as she brings up a young son who solo, who later turns out to be a baseball star. Even
Nathan Detroit wasn’t that kind of louse when he evaded Adelaide for all those
years.
Elliot Lazar, Sarah Errington and Jason Maddy |
Sarah Errington another comic talent in another character
change she becomes the high falutin debutant Valeria on a mission to get rich
quick by marrying Jabez Thursday (Lance Carter) a rich stock broker (Debutant
Number One” by Victor Young) who as it turns out is an underground bookie. Ya just can’t trust those stockbrokers!
The musicians, Jodi Hill, Jeff Dalrymple, Musical director Cris
O’Bryon and Gerard Notan even managed some stage time, but for a brief moment.
With songs from Loesser’s playbook including “Heart and Soul” (Hoagy
Carmichael), “I Hear Music”, “Two Sleepy People” “Let’s Get Lost” “You’ve Got
the Look”, “Debutant Number One” (Victor Young) I could have listened all
night. Would that the musical score was as deep and rooted as the characters,
all would be right with Loesser’s world as well as mine
Cast "Another Roll Of The Dice" |
Credit to Marty Burnett’s minimalist set design, Aaron
Rumley’s sound design/projections, Matt Novotny’s lighting and Phillip Korth’s
props.
For some fun on the darker side head up to Solana Beach where
you will meet some street characters that might some day cross your path.
As Harry The Horse said: “I have nothing to hide. I collected
the reward for my father”.
It’s all so wondergul.
Dates: Through Aug. 11th
Organization: North Coast Repertory Theatre
Phone: 858-481-1055
Production Type: Musical Comedy
Where: 987 Lomas Santa Fe Drive, Solana Beach, CA 92075
Ticket Prices: Start at $49.00
Web: northcoastrep.org
Photo: Aaron Rumley
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