Thursday, August 13, 2020

245. HOW THE OTHER HALF LOVES. From my (unpublished) ENCYCLOPEDIA OF THE NEW YORK STAGE, 1970-1975

Phil Silvers, Bernice Massi.

Note: Several entries beginning with the letter H were inadvertently overlooked when their turn came to be posted. They are now being posted, albeit belatedly and out of alphabetical and numerical order.

HOW THE OTHER HALF LOVES [Comedy/British/Marriage/Sex] A: Alan Ayckbourn; D: Gene Saks; S: David Mitchell; C: Winn Morton; L: Peggy Clark; P: Michael Myerberg, Peter Bridge, and Eddie Kulukundis i/a/w Lawrence Shubert Lawrence; T: Royale Theatre; 3/29/71-6/26/71 (104)

Sandy Dennis, Jeanne Hepple.
How the Other Half Loves was the first in a series of Alan Ayckbourn’s popular British comedies and farces to appear in New York. Unlike Broadway’s productions of his later, plays (several of them substantial hits), this one made the egregious error of shifting characters and locale to the United States, thus obliterating, among other things, the built-in class distinctions that are so crucial to the humor in such works. Even a company with Sandy Dennis, Phil Silvers, and Richard Mulligan couldn’t make the transformation from British to American contexts work.

The conventional adultery plot concerns a businessman, Frank Foster (Phil Silver), whose wife, Fiona (Bernice Massi), has spent the night with a married neighbor, Bob Phillips (Richard Mulligan), who is also an employee of Foster’s. The guilty couple try to explain their behavior to their respective spouses—Sandy Dennis played Bob’s wife, Teresa—by enlisting a third couple, William and Mary Detweiler (Tom Aldredge and Jeanne Hepple)—who are primed to agree to a tale about the guilty pair having been with them, obtaining counsel about their respective marital problems.

Ayckbourn’s fascination with theatrical tomfoolery was reflected in having the same interior setting representing the homes of both central couples, with the action for some scenes taking place in both homes simultaneously. Credibility and clarity were strained by the device, however. Especially when, using a cross-shaped table, a pair of dinner parties were given with the same guests present, as if on two consecutive evenings.

The actors—apart from Dennis—labored in vain to make the material click, but the critical reactions were mostly downbeat. To Richard Watts, it was “a singularly heavy-handed and stubbornly unamusing attempt at wild fun-making,” and Douglas Watt dismissed it as “too witless, improbable and flat . . . for Broadway at its most charitable.”

Silvers was considered miscast but Dennis scored highly. “A delectable scatterbrain, she appears to be permanently stalled somewhere between bed and breakfast. Sandy is one of life’s winning losers. Her eyes imply that the tear ducts were installed first, and her voice box quivers with a heart broken in transit. Perhaps she is every father’s illusion of a vulnerable daughter,” applauded T.E. Kalem.