94. THE COUNTRY HOUSE
I saw the Manhattan Theatre Club’s
production of THE COUNTRY HOUSE, Donald Margulies’s imperfect,
sporadically enjoyable comedy about a theatrical family, on a Friday, but it’s
really a throwback Thursday kind of play. Veteran theatregoers visiting the
Samuel J. Friedman Theatre won’t be challenged by the show, which premiered at
Los Angeles’s Geffen Playhouse this past summer, but they’ll bask in the
comfort of the kind of immediately recognizable writing, scenery, staging, and
performance for which the Great White Way is famous.
From left: Kate Jennings Grant, Daniel Sunjata, Sarah Steele, Eric Lange, Blythe Danner. Photo: Joan Marcus. |
Williamstown, of course, is the Berkshires
home every summer to a major theatre company that attracts important stars (like Ms. Danner),
many of them famous in films or TV and seeking to find artistic solace by
returning, if only briefly, to the stage, usually in the revival of an old
play. Anna, whose beautiful country house, which, like her, is beginning to
show its age, is conveniently nearby, making it a suitable place for theatrical
types to visit. She’s preparing to play Mrs. Warren in Shaw’s MRS. WARREN’S
PROFESSION, which gives her opportunities to express the frustrations faced by
an aging star, both in terms of the difficulties of learning lines and finding suitable
stage work, not to mention the “work” performers need to do to maintain their
appearance.
At the supermarket, Anna runs
into Michael Astor (Daniel Sunjata, charming), a handsome hunk
of an actor in his 40s against whose Marchbanks she once played Shaw’s Candida.
Michael’s going into rehearsal for Molnar’s THE GUARDSMAN, the show preceding
Anna’s, so, possibly because she feels the stirrings of her still simmering
libido, Anna invites the much younger man to stay at the house while his own digs are being
fumigated to eliminate an insect infestation.
The presence of this gorgeous man,
now starring as a doctor in a hit sci-fi TV show, stirs more than Anna’s
juices; it affects the hormonal chemistry of both her outspoken, 19-year-old, “plainly
lovely” (as Margulies describes her), college student granddaughter, Susie
Keegan (Sarah Steele, just right), who admits to having had a crush on him
since she was in her crib, and of another woman, Nell McNally (Kate Jennings
Grant, lovely). Nell, a struggling actress, is the beautiful 35-year-old fiancée
of Walter Keegan (David Rasche, outstanding), Susie’s 66-year-old dad, a film
director known for a moneymaking blow ‘em up film franchise.
Kate Jennings Grant, David Rasche. Photo: Joan Marcus. |
Mr. Margulies allows these
ingredients to stew as the characters renew old acquaintances or begin new
ones, with plot lines involving Michael’s humanitarian work in Africa; his
loveless—but far from sexless—love life and brief attraction to Nell (which culminates
during the very funny conclusion of a power outage); Elliott’s attempt to
rekindle what he imagines to have been a love affair with Nell; the reading by
the characters of Elliott’s first play (his acting career in a shambles, he’s chosen
playwriting as his new métier); and the disastrous aftermath of that reading
when the tenaciously defensive Elliott seeks feedback.
Mr. Margulies’s dialogue is always crisp, convincing, and
clever, suiting his characters and making their conversations entertaining. But
the real fun in a play like this is the impression it gives that you’re
overhearing real show people talk about the things that real show people talk
about. Susie’s deconstruction of Michael’s status as an actor, and what people
seek in a star, is one example; another is Walter’s critique of Elliott’s
playwriting aspirations, and his response to Elliott’s condemnation of him for “selling
out” as an artist in order to make commercially successful schlock. The
confrontation between Walter and Elliott, in fact, even though it doesn’t
include Ms. Danner, the putative star, is the liveliest scene in the play,
made vivid by the vitriolic dynamics of Mr. Rasche and Mr. Lange.
The play’s three acts, with one intermission, play out over
a little more than two hours in John Lee Beatty’s classic iteration of the kind
of realistically homey set he does so well, with its cutaway peaked wooden roof,
upstage staircase, and down center couch. Peter Kaczorowski’s lights
(especially during a fierce thunderstorm and blackout) and Rita Ryack’s
costumes, supplemented by Peter Golub’s original music and Obadiah Eaves’s
sound design (that storm again), give the show the Broadway gloss it requires.
THE COUNTRY HOUSE has a tendency to meander, and sometimes
seems more like a collection of scenes than a fully integrated play, but, as directed by Daniel Sullivan, it
gives the ensemble plenty of opportunities to shine, although you
have to wait a bit for Ms. Danner to have her big moments. Elliott’s
bitchiness, which annoys everyone on stage, eventually threatens to irk even the
poor ticket-buying eavesdroppers, and too many moments, especially the closing ones, tend to
drag, but, if you're in the mood for a pleasant,
old-fashioned, throwback evening on Broadway, with a still glowing
star leading the way, THE COUNTRY HOUSE’s doors are open for you to enter.