The whole concept of the play-within-a-play that goes wrong is thoroughly and thoughtfully carried out, from the upside down marquis, to the ridiculous faux credits for The Murder at Haversham Manor in the playbill, to the actors wandering around the audience in character before the show. The meta nature of the show allows the actors as the characters to know and acknowledge they're in a play, and talk to and react to the audience. The more the audience laughs, cheers, or boos, the bigger their reactions. The eight-person cast portrays an American stage manager (Angela Grovey) and lighting and sound operator (Brandon J. Ellis), the latter stationed in a side balcony with a fake (?) light and sound board for much of the play, and the British cast including the director/president of the drama society presenting the play/everything else/actor Chris Bean (Evan Alexander Smith), and the rest of the ensemble of Haversham Manor (Jamie Ann Romero, Ned Noyes, Peyton Crim, Scott Cote, and Yaegel T. Welch). They're all completely committed to the broad comedic style of the piece, and go big in their own specific ways. My favorites: Ned Noyes, whose actor character hams it up for the audience in the most delightful way, doing anything for applause and laughter; and Evan Alexander Smith, with an improvised segment reacting to the audience and some spot-on Minnesota references.
the cast and crew of The Murder at Haversham Manor (photo by Jeremy Daniel) |
what could go wrong? (photo by Jeremy Daniel) |
The set (designed by Nigel Hook) is a sort of a smallish manor set that doesn't take up the full space of the Orpheum Stage - a seemingly simple library or parlor, with a small second story. But what it does is quite impressive, as things fall off the walls at the perfect moments, then are replaced (magnets?). There are several jaw-dropping moments of things falling, and in the end, the walls come down (literally). This is one of those plays in which the stagehands come out at curtain call to take a well deserved bow.
The play will continue to go wrong, and wronger, in downtown Minneapolis for just a few more days. If you need a good, big, silly laugh at mindfully mindless broad comedy, perfectly executed by this traveling troupe, go see one of the five remaining performances of The Play That Goes Wrong.