Christopher Plummer. |
THE GOOD DOCTOR
[Comedy/Family/One-Acts/Russia/Sex/Theatre] A/LY: Neil
Simon; D: A.J. Antoon; S/C: Tony Walton; L: Tharon Musser; M: Peter Link; P: Emanuel Azenberg and Eugene V. Wolsk; T: Eugene O’Neill Theatre; 11/21/74-5/26/74 (208)
Simon; D: A.J. Antoon; S/C: Tony Walton; L: Tharon Musser; M: Peter Link; P: Emanuel Azenberg and Eugene V. Wolsk; T: Eugene O’Neill Theatre; 11/21/74-5/26/74 (208)
Rene Auberjonois, Christopher Plummer, |
Neil Simon’s failed attempt to blend his New York urban
humor with material suggested by the great Russian dramatist/short story writer
Anton Chekhov was an evening of vignettes, based largely on Chekhov’s early
stories. Some of the pieces were merely character sketches, others approached
the one-act form. They all were linked by the presence of the “good doctor,” or
Chekhov himself, as played by Christopher Plummer, who not only narrated the
program, but acted in some of the scenes.
Among the nine sketches were “The Sneeze,” about a minor
bureaucrat (Rene Auberjonois) who sneezes on the bald head of his boss (Barnard
Hughes) and eventually dies from the anguish to which this leads; “The
Governess,” in which a tightfisted matron (Frances Sternhagen) systematically
makes ruthless deductions from her young governess’s (Martha Henry) salary; “The
Seduction,” concerning a father (Plummer) instructing his son (Auberjonois) on
how to deal with prostitutes; and “The Audition,” dealing with a young actress’s
(Marsha Mason) tryout for Chekhov himself by performing a speech from The Three Sisters.
Marsha Mason, Frances Sternhagen. |
The critics were annoyed by the split personality of the
writing, which was never sufficiently Chekhovian or effectively Simonian. There
were occasional delights in evidence: some of the jokes clicked, one or two
moments were touching, and the acting, Plummer’s especially, was impeccable.
However, The Good Doctor was unable to cure its maladies.
Chrisopher Plummer, Barnard Hughes. |
Clive Barnes thought the best scenes “droll and enchanting,”
the weak ones “labored,” and the work as a whole “too anecdotal, with most
stories closing with the dramatic ring of a punchline.” To Walter Kerr, the
combination of Simon wisecracks and Chekhov wisdom made for a “thin pot-au-feu” that, as theatre, was “strained”
and devoid of “creative energy.” He attributed this to the poor selection of
Chekhov material as much as to Simon’s stylistic distance from his inspiration.
Harold Clurman put it in these terms: “Even in his lightest moments Chekhov is
modest, gentle, above all delicate and, as it were, chaste when the material itself is crude. Simon, I am sure,
appreciates this, but the New York touch is always a little crass, obviously
nudging, without heart.”
Rene Auberjonois was nominated for a Best Supporting Actor,
Play, Tony; Frances Sternhagen, won the Best Supporting Actress, Play, Tony;
Peter Link garnered a Tony nomination for his score, and Tharon Musser one for
her lighting.