206.
LOOT
The
late British playwright Joe Orton’s black farce, LOOT, is one of those plays
with a great reputation for absurdist hilarity, partly because of the author’s
relative notoriety as a gay man in then zero-tolerance England (he was murdered
by his male lover, who then committed suicide), but that has never been able to
cash in at New York’s box offices. It has had two Broadway productions, one in
1968 that ran 22 performances after 11 previews, and another, in 1986, that
caved after 5 previews and 96 performances. The only actor of serious note in
the 1968 version was English star George Rose, who played the Scotland Yard
inspector, Truscott, while the 1986 revival benefitted from the presence of Joseph
Maher as Truscott, Alec Baldwin as Dennis, the undertaker-burglar, and Željko Ivanek
as his co-burglar, Hal, and Zoe Wanamaker as Fay, the homicidal
nurse. The Red Bull Theater’s poky new revival, Off Broadway at the Lucille
Lortel Theatre, under Jesse Berger’s direction, is unlikely to alter the play’s
local trajectory.
From left: Ryan Garbayo, Nick Westrate. Photo: Rahav Segev/Photopass.com.
Narelle Sissons’s naturalistic living
room set, with its pale, fading wallpaper, plastic-covered easy chair, water-stained
ceiling, and other touches of lower middle-class gentility, captures the
mid-1960s English ambience well enough, as do a few of Sara Jean Tosetti’s Rolling
Stones-era costumes, like Hal’s (Nick Westrate) white shirt, skinny tie, skinny
black jeans, and black leather jacket. The actors, however, only one of whom
(Jarlath Conroy as McLeavy) appears to be English-born and raised, struggle to
find the right balance between comic realism and absurdist farce to make us
care about their dilemmas in the oddball world Orton creates around them.
Mr.
Berger has directed the piece almost as if it were taking place on a music hall
stage; actors frequently stand in pairs and deliver their dialogue like stand
up comedians, speaking their lines straight to the audience, with stage lights
up bright and footlights focused to create tall, artificial shadows on the rear
wall. Many of the bits do have a touch of the crossfire style redolent of music
halls or vaudeville, but not enough of it is risible enough to sustain the
style for long, and the approach gets thinner as the play proceeds. Despite the
high energy of the performances, the timing is awry, even sluggish, and I
found myself sitting stone-faced as the audience seemed to be working just as
hard to support the actors as the latter did to entertain the audience. My
companion for the evening fled after the first act.
LOOT
revels in the kind of offbeat, racy, anarchistic, and grotesque humor we
associate with 1960s British comedy, a taste of which survives on the old “Benny
Hill” TV show. There’s definitely a powerful stream of subversion here, both in the play’s epigrammatic quips and knockabout
humor. It hurls satiric bolts at the Catholic Church and makes an especially
nasty attack on the arrogance, stupidity, and corruption of the British police;
this is an institution with which Orton had awful experiences, including a
six-month jail term and a bankruptcy-producing fine for the crime of stealing and
defacing library books. Orton believed his sentence was a cover to punish him for his
homosexuality. The police are mainly present in the person of Truscott (Rocco
Sisto), an overbearing detective whose investigation into a bank robbery leads
him to enter the house of McLeavy, whose wife has just died, by pretending to
be from the metropolitan water board (thus freeing him from the necessity of
producing a search warrant).
Dominating the living room is a coffin containing the remains of the late Mrs. McLeavy, whose corpse, wrapped in linens, eventually becomes a comical prop whose rudely sacrilegious treatment is intended to have the audience rolling in the aisles. Much is made as well of one of the corpse’s glass eyes (which is featured on the Playbill cover design), but despite all the opportunities for comic mayhem, the production never jells. A reading of the script reveals numerous potentially hilarious lines and bits of business, but the cast is unable to overcome the feeling that they’re swimming upstream against the farcical current.
Dominating the living room is a coffin containing the remains of the late Mrs. McLeavy, whose corpse, wrapped in linens, eventually becomes a comical prop whose rudely sacrilegious treatment is intended to have the audience rolling in the aisles. Much is made as well of one of the corpse’s glass eyes (which is featured on the Playbill cover design), but despite all the opportunities for comic mayhem, the production never jells. A reading of the script reveals numerous potentially hilarious lines and bits of business, but the cast is unable to overcome the feeling that they’re swimming upstream against the farcical current.
From left: Rocco Sisto, Nick Westrate, Ryan Garbayo. Photo: Rahav Segev/Photopass.com.
The
lynchpin performance has to be that of the actor playing Truscott, a
marvelously written role in which Rocco Sisto is seriously miscast. Truscott
has a particularly relevant contemporary edge because he reminds us of the
secretive powers of the NSA, which will go to any lengths to surveil our every
action and word. The quite tall Mr. Sisto, wearing a handlebar mustache, bowler
hat, and dressed completely in black, towers over his fellow
players, throwing the visual balance of the play somewhat off balance. His Truscott
is physically menacing—the character thinks nothing of using force on those he
suspects of malfeasance—but he lacks the comic imagination to wring all the ironies
from the often inverted logic of his lines. Nor did Mr. Sisto’s frequent verbal
lapses the night I saw the play help him very much.
As Fay, Mrs. McLeavy’s nurse, a woman who has murdered each of her
seven husbands, Rebecca Brooksher looks right but works too hard at being funny, which can also
be said of the rest of the other principals, Nick Westrate as Hal, Ryan Garbayo
as Dennis, Mr. Conroy as McLeavy. Most of the actors perform with an arch, winking
at the audience attitude (including self-conscious poses that almost require a “da-da-boom”
drum beat). The lack of consistency and authenticity in the British
accents is one more nail in this inadequate production’s coffin.
Jareth Conroy. Photo: Rahav Segev/Photopass.com.
Mr.
Orton’s farce will likely remain a cult classic on the page, but, in New York,
at least, whatever treasures LOOT contains remain to be discovered on the stage.