Wednesday, July 15, 2020

217. A GUN PLAY. From my (unpublished) ENCYCLOPEDIA OF THE NEW YORK STAGE, 1970-1975

Eugene Troobnick, Tony Musante, Arny Freeman.
A GUN PLAY [Comedy-Drama/Crime/Restaurant] A: Yale M. Yudoff; D: Gene Frankel; S: Ralph Funicello, Marjorie Kellogg; L: Paul Sullivan; P: Ken Gaston, Leonard Goldberg, and A.I. Baron i/a/w Steven Beckler and Jon Delon; T: Cherry Lane Theatre (OB); 10/24/71-11/14/71 (23)

A Gun Play arrived Off Broadway after an initial showing by the Hartford Stage Company. It was received as an overly symbolic work about “the canker in our society” represented by an assortment of eccentric character types assembled in an once fashionable restaurant whose basement is mysteriously flooding with water. The floorshow presented to the customers is a presentation of film clips featuring old horror movies and historical atrocities, such as the Nazi death camps. Finally, a movie-type gangster mows everyone down with a machine gun as retribution for their sins.

Written in a semi-absurdist vein, it had offbeat scenes of humor, as when a killer used a credit card to pay a girl delivering ammunition to him. Clive Barnes had reservations about the play’s originality, but recommended it, while Walter Kerr denigrated its “lightweight and deadening” characters and dialogue, as well as its “false . . . , gratuitous [and] clumsy” symbolism. Edith Oliver rejected it as “a foolish venture.”

The amusing performance of Eugene Troobnick as an incompetent waiter was well liked, and Barnes called Gene Frankel’s direction “exemplary.” The sizable cast included M’el Dowd, Tony Musante, and Arny Freeman, among others.