"In the Mood"
"In the Mood" by Kathleen Clark. Directed by Marc Bruni. At Berkshire Theatre Festival.
Comedy rears its sitcom best on the Berkshire Theatre Festival's FitzPatrick Main Stage for the first part of August. Kathleen Clark's lightweight romantic farcical comedy "In the Mood," with a delicious cast of coy players, is lighting up the stage for a while and we should all be very grateful. The 75-minute one-act, about half the length of a real play, could probably be pared down even further and made even funnier by taking out a subplot that really adds very little other than two characters who aren't really needed to tell the story in this play.
Right up front we're told that Sally Elliot won't be attending a party given by Perri Rubin, even though she was expected to be the body at the piano for the cocktail surprise bash Perri is throwing for her husband Derek's birthday. When she shows up about midway into the evening, it is both a surprise and a curiosity, for her brother Nick is already there playing 1940s songs. Nick has a thing for Perri, a thing they once exploited before her marriage to Derek, Derek's fourth marriage it seems. The biggest surprise comes when Derek and a small blonde woman suddenly appear. Misunderstandings begin to mask the classic comedy thrall of French farce, except that the six doors and the staircase entrance never function in the physical manner of a farce. They just exist.
Clark is lucky to have director Marc Bruni and a very talented company to shore up the basic simplicity of her play. Her lines are mostly amusing. Their delivery in a dry and droll manner gets the laughs. Bruni's timing is responsible for the success of this piece and when the cast members move through laughs or ignore the audience's reaction the play is really doing its job delivering a human and humorous reality.
Perri is played beautifully by Erin Dilly, Never better than in the final moments of the play when she spurns her husband's next wife or when she discovers her old love may be her best love, Dilly has a sensitivity that shines in her face. Her character tries to hide this facet but not even the biggest setting can obscure this diamond's superb cut.
Damian Young played her husband. He has a Roger Rees quality that screams untrustworthy from his initial appearance. That he maintains this throughout is a tribute to his abilities in such a role. Jennifer Cody is his short friend Carolyn and she plays this part with the strength of a future Medea of comedy.
The superfluous, but genuinely endearing, couple are played by Johanna Day as Sally and Arnie Burton as Edward Norton (not the film star, but an actor nevertheless). Edward is an actor playing a contractor and as Burton plays him he is a much better actor than Perri, who has hired him, might have a right to expect. Day has a strong, masculine charm about her and she makes Sally into a memorable woman. She does forthright behavior with charm and charm with a bullishness that is genuinely amusing.
Nick, Sally's brother and Perri's ex, is a stalwart sort of fellow, although quirky and a bit standoffish with Perri. Their attraction is evident and as played by Stephen R. Buntrock Nick is attractively burly and almost brutally real. His presence grounds the play in reality and he makes the comedy softer as a result. With a slightly stronger ending, his vocalizing might have an even deeper resonance in terms of romance.
There's a beautiful set designed by Lee Savage, lush costumes from Laurie Churba Kohn and reasonable lighting by David Lander. Scot Killian's sound design includes an off-stage scene with John McMartin and Jessica Walter.
A light, frothy confection with a whipped center and a cherry on top, "In the Mood" is one of those plays you will see, enjoy and forget before your next night out. It is clever, but caught in its own familiar traps. It is funny, but the lines aren't ones you'll be quoting to friends for their amusement. You won't covet the clothes, or the characters' friend. You will only laugh and pass an hour or so in a comedy situation that smacks of "that's not going to happen to me." But if forewarned is fore-armed, see this play and then examine the world close to you for comparisons; hopefully there won't be any.
"In the Mood: plays at the Berkshire Theatre Festival on Routes 7 and 102 in Stockbridge through Aug. 13. For information and tickets call the box office at 413-298-5576.