A one-woman show about Katherine Hepburn for the Ivoryton Playhouse schedule is a natural fit. The legendary Hollywood and Broadway performer starred in some of the theater’s early shows. Her family estate was just a stone’s throw away in Old Saybrook.
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Carlyn Connolly as Katherine Hepburn in Tea at Five. |
Playwright Matthew Lombardo, a Hartford native, has taken material from Hepburn’s book about her life, Me: Stories of My Life, and worked it into Tea at Five, a breezy, two-act play. The first part of the show occurs in September 1938. Even though the Hepburn has won her first Oscar and appeared on Broadway, her recent string of movie flops has labeled her “box office poison.” During this time, the actress playing Hepburn, winningly portrayed by Carlyn Connolly, looks at her life, her upbringing, and the individuals and events that helped shape her. There is a continuous thread about the role that escaped her – that of Scarlett O’Hara in Gone With the Wind.
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Carlyn Connolly as Katherine Hepburn in Tea at Five. |
Act II takes place years later, in February 1983. The actress, hobbled by an injury from a car accident and the onset of a neurological disorder called essential tremor (not Parkinson’s), reflects on, among other matters, her now-legendary career and her tempestuous relationship with her father. The emphasis, though, is on her heartbreaking and tumultuous romance with Spencer Tracy.
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Carlyn Connolly as Katherine Hepburn in Tea at Five. |
Ms. Connolly breaks the fourth wall in a continuous monologue to the audience. Entertaining and sometimes informative, Tea at Five is an intimate portrayal of a true star. Lombardo provides just enough tantalizing details to keep the work interesting. However, the play sinks or swims on the strength of the actress playing Hepburn. Carlyn Connolly more than meets the challenge. She effortlessly embodies the famed thespian, showing her passions and shortcomings, especially when she appears in the second act as the older Hepburn, suitably costumed by designer Sean Spina. Connolly’s mannerisms and vocal inflections are spot on.
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Carlyn Connolly as Katherine Hepburn in Tea at Five. |
Director Jacqueline Hubbard keeps the pacing snappy and employs enough movement and theatricality to keep the show appealing. Scenic Designer Starlet Jacobs has crafted an inviting sitting room of the Fenwick estate. Lighting Designer Marcus Abbott baths the set with warmth, and Sound Designer Jonathan White provides the ominous thundering of an impending storm.
Tea at Five, playing at the Ivoryton Playhouse through June 8. Click here for dates, times, and ticket information.