REVIEW: Dracula, A Comedy of Terrors by Jerry Crouch

Dracula, A Comedy of Terrors, opened Friday night, October 3rd at Chapin Theatre Company and grabbed the audience by their throats, tickling their collective funny bones, sucking every laugh possible from the applauding fans. In the slapstick, standup comedy tradition of Mel Brooks and Monty Python, this silly spoof of Bram Stoker's classic 1897 vampire novel is dazzlingly acted out by five of the most versatile actors Columbia theatre has to offer. Four playing a brew of manic, murderous multitude of roles, not unlike last Chapin Theatre season's role-switching The 39 Steps where the starring lead male then was none other than this show's fang-tastic director, George Dinsmore.

This 90-minute blood-thirsty play offers these actors—Debra Kiser, David Fichter, Frank Thompson, Katie Mixon and Josh Kern—the challenge of a theatrical lifetime,  throwing puns, punchlines, and naughty innuendos against the ever-changing castle walls amid the nimble narrative, with lightning quick costume changes (some hilariously done on stage) and with a plethora of accents! The big character role winners by a Transylvanian mile are Fichter and Kiser, blending proper British and German accents along with a variety of other dizzy dialects and personalities making for a madcap cocktail of fun. But let's toss kudos of garlic-laced funeral wreaths to the entire cast of this bawdy farce.

David Fichter is a dead-on hoot playing the misogynistic Dr Westfeldt, who begins as the arch-nemesis of Kiser's strict, straightlaced German Van Helsing. But their second act reactions take a decided turn for the better. Fichter's loony, bug-eating, straight-jacketed Renfield almost steals the night's spotlight from Kiser's redhead coiffed Mina, a desperate date-deprived spinster in need of some serious orthodontal intervention. Fichter also manages to step into the role of a salty Sea Captain with both actors early on, becoming ferocious howling wolves along with Mixon.

Mixon is the epitome of the courageous but romantically confused heroine, Lucy Westfeldt, hitting every nuanced note and her role switch to the kleptomaniac mental nurse, Kitty, is a delicious surprise. Mixon also plays a rowdy carriage driver in the opening scene. Master comedian, Frank Thompson plays the night's straight man in the role of the cowardly real estate agent, Jonathan, and in one scene (with a bow to Sesame Street) plays three characters at once in the guises of the Scottish Lord Cavendish, the very British Worthington, and the Texan, Lord Havemercy. Thompson also easily polished off the double roles of a scurvy Bosun and a drunken Gravedigger. 

But with all the night's multiple role switching, is the leading actor short-changed playing only a single role? Hardly. Josh Kern in the sexy buff role of Dracula proves a deadly, charming centerfold and an equal opportunity romancer of both Lucy and even her intended, Jonathan Harker. As Harker, Thompson enjoys a late act romantic renovation after his rendezvous with Kern which proves to be a neck-biter twist. Earlier this season, Kern perfectly played the comic lead of Paul in Barefoot in the Park, so here, his sly, narcissistic, revisited take on this horror icon shows his considerable versatility on the Chapin stage in two radically different performances in one season. Bravo!

Special honors goes to Dracula Producers, Jim DeFelice and Tiffany Dinsmore for bringing this comedy gem to their Chapin stage. The beautiful, facile set, sound, costume, props, and dramatic projection designs are ambitious, but all laser quick transitions came off with nary a hitch on opening night.

Dracula, A Comedy of Terrors 
Adapted by Gordon Greenberg and Steve Rosen plays for two more weekends
October 3, 4, 9-10-11 and 16-17-18 at 7:30 pm evening performances with 
October 12 and 19 on Sunday 3:00 pm matinees.

Chapin Theatre Company is located at 830 Columbia Avenue, Chapin 29036
For tickets: 
chapintheatre.org    [803] 240-8544

 

REVIEW: Workshop Theatre Welcomes Audiences Back with New Work - The Campaign, written and directed by Crystal Aldamuy

In Shakespeare’s day, Elizabethans went not to see a play, but rather to ‘hear’ a play.  If the mark of a listenable story is its strength of dialogue, Crystal Aldamuy has the gift of gab. She puts words into her characters’ mouths that make us feel as though we are eavesdropping through a tenement wall. This is more than evident in her latest feat of derring do, a two-act relationship drama called The Campaign produced by Workshop Theatre. Not only does Aldamuy exhibit an acumen for how people talk, but she also proves a competent craftsperson in the construction of plot.

The Campaign tells the story of Kyle McMillian, an ambitious thirty-something who embarks on entering a local city council race, and his life with his flamboyant partner, Seth Williams. The two young men grapple with the universal vagaries of keeping their love alive while cohabitating in somewhat claustrophobic quarters. Their relationship is further challenged by Kyle’s meddling mom, Naomi, whose raison d’etre appears early on to be shopping for her son and picking out just the right sofa pillows.  

At the outset, Kyle and Seth present as a familiar trope of ‘gay odd couple.’ Kyle’s reticence is juxtaposed by Seth’s inability to keep anything to himself. When the moment arrives for Kyle to announce that he has thrown his hat in the ring to be a local politician, Seth has become disillusioned by the reality of their relationship. Seth now must compete for Kyle’s attention and must ‘campaign’ for his true loyalty. This conflict reaches a fever pitch when a man named Timothy enters the picture later in the game.   

Aldamuy’s two main characters’ wants and drives become clearer as the play progresses. Though the inclusion of Kyle’s mother, Naomi, appears first as a single-dimensional plot device, her development of personae is enriched by a touching scene wherein she connects for the first time with Seth at the kitchen table. No spoilers here, though.

Josh Kern as the earnest Kyle McMillion, son of the apparently legendary politician, Walter McMillion, is excellent. He moves throughout the play with ease, giving us a protagonist who desires far more than simply being a domestic AC repairman.

Julian Deleon sparkles with quick one-liners and hilarious mood swings. Deleon may well be the audience favorite as he maintains a type-A drama queen personality who is culinarily challenged and suffers panic attacks during failed attempts at assembling Ikea shelves.

Tiffany Dinsmore is delightful as Naomi McMillion, a mother who strives to insert herself into her son’s life and relationship with the best of intentions. Dinsmore is believable and never over-plays her hand in a role that could so easily have become a caricature.

As a playwright, Aldamuy delivers and gives us some firm bones.  

Missing, however, are clear and smooth transitions between scenes that could better convey the passage of time. These moments, when actors enter and exit depositing and retrieving props in half-light, were confusing.

Act One seemed to take a while before any significant conflict gave its characters the impetus for action. It might also have been technically stronger had Aldamuy directed Josh Kern to vocally project more as he was difficult to hear at times, keeping us on the edge of our seats for the wrong reasons. This took nothing away, however, from Kern’s powerful exchange with Deleon at the end of Act II, two scenes back-to-back that were worth the price of admission alone.

The script struggled to present a narrative that is socially relevant in 2021 with scenes about condoms and AIDS prevention (though certainly still a part of world we live in) giving us tired theatrical territory, once an important innovation in the eighties by dramatists such as Larry Kramer and William Hoffman, but by now a trope with which audiences are overly familiar.

Challenges aside, however, The Campaign is well-worth your time. Workshop Theatre has another winner here with local stalwarts Aldamuy, Kern, Deleon, and Dinsmore at the helm. Remaining performances are few. Do not miss this one!

Fri, Oct 8 8 PM, Sat, Oct 9 8 PM, Sun, Oct 10 3 PM

Tickets at Workshoptheatre.com

 

Christofer Cook is an active member of the Dramatists Guild of America. He holds an MFA, an MA, and a BA. An internationally produced and award-winning playwright, his latest work is “Amityville, 1925” which opens at Theatre Mysterium on October 21st.