| The (Re)Play Is the Thing: “Rehearsal for Murder,” at the Playcrafters Barn Theatre through May 22 |
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| Theatre - Reviews | |||
| Written by Thom White | |||
| Monday, 16 May 2011 06:00 | |||
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Adapted by D.D. Brooks from the teleplay by Richard Levinson and William Link (the piece was originally produced as a 1982 television movie), Rehearsal for Murder focuses on a playwright’s effort to find the murderer of his fiancée, Monica. Gathering the cast and crew of his final play on the anniversary of her apparent suicide, he forces them to read through new scenes he’s written – scenes that may provide motive for each person to have killed his true love – and Rehearsal for Murder’s writers effectively convey the emotion in their work. What they’re guilty of, though, is what I find annoying about most staged mysteries: With crucial information deliberately withheld, it’s not possible for the audience to solve the mystery ourselves. Yet despite being frustrated by the fact that, once again, playwrights were unfairly tricking us by pulling the old bait-and-switch (something that’s even admitted by one character here), I walked away from Playcrafters’ work not minding so much, as director Tom Swegle’s restrained effort highlights the sad sweetness at the core of the piece.
It’s worth noting that Rehearsal for Murder marks the first time on stage for three of its cast members, as admitted in their program bios. It’s clear that Minnie Winters and Craig Newkirk – as a female police officer and the investigating police lieutenant, respectively – are green actors, but it’s also evident that they will likely improve quickly, given more stage experience. Harrison Wallace, however, appears to be a director’s dream as Lloyd, the director of Dennison’s final play. While his inflections and, especially, his gestures are a touch too exaggerated, it’s a problem many directors have told me they prefer, as it’s easier to get an actor to tone it down than it is to get him or her to play things bigger. (Wallace isn’t exaggerated to the degree that he falls into caricature, but the role is overplayed enough that it loses a bit of its sincerity.) As for Jordan L. Smith, whose bio only mentions a first-grade credit, Rehearsal for Murder is his Playcrafters’ stage debut, and the actor’s “First Man” – a lieutenant in Dennison’s murder-anniversary play – is nicely shaded with self-certainty and daftness.
Commendations aside, many of the actors, on Friday, seemed to not wholly understand the motivations behind their lines, altering their meanings and the tones of certain scenes with inflections or emotions that didn’t quite match their dialogue. This didn’t sink the entire ship, though, as Playcrafters’ Rehearsal for Murder is worthwhile for its tenderness alone.
For tickets and information, call (309)762-0330 or visit Playcrafters.com.
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