Playwright Joe Orton, in his short life, created a number of
shocking, almost surreal theatrical productions in the mid-1960’s. These scandalous black comedies were
ahead of their time and can still titillate today. What the Butler Saw, playing at the Westport Country Playhouse
through September 10th, is an outrageous example of his work. The laughs come in fits and starts in this bawdy,
lascivious farce that skewers blundering bureaucrats, puffed-up psychiatrists,
and sexual peccadilloes.
The show opens as Dr. Prentice, a lecherous fool, is
interviewing for a new secretary. He
convinces the naïve young female applicant to undress behind a curtain in his
examining room. That straightforward
request sets off a chain reaction of events that slowly spiral out of control,
creating one screwball scenario after another for the assorted eccentrics and
misfits. Part of the fun of the show is
how the playwright takes a simple premise and through misdirection, misinterpretation
and misinformation creates a madcap world.
L-R: Robert Stanton, Sarah Manton, and Paxton Whitehead in “What the Butler Saw,” at Westport Country Playhouse. Photo by Carol Rosegg |
The acting corps is
first-rate. Robert Stanton is sterling
as the debauched psychiatrist Dr. Prentice.
He enriches his character with a dash of daftness, a dollop of
prissiness, and an overwhelming sense of grandeur. Paxton Whitehead, a familiar face at Westport
and a seasoned veteran, is marvelous as the pompous, overeager Dr. Rance. His wild psychological theories and
self-aggrandized actions help ratchet up the absurdity of the play. Patricia Kalember is deliciously lusty as the
somewhat over-the-hill, sexpot wife of Dr. Prentice. She is both vulnerable and scrappy with her
husband and the other characters. Julian
Gamble is wonderfully befuddled as the Sergeant on the beat. Sarah Manton as Geraldine Barclay, a
secretarial applicant who inadvertently sets the whole story in motion, is
suitably perplexed as she too is caught in the show’s absurd vortex. Chris Ghaffari is naughtily cocksure as
Nicholas Beckett, a brash, overly confident, sex-driven bellhop.
L-R: Robert Stanton, Julian Gamble, and Chris Ghaffari in “What the Butler Saw,” at Westport Country Playhouse. Photo by Carol Rosegg |
Director John Tillinger, who has
helmed many of Joe Orton’s plays, keeps a self-assured hand on the
production. There are four entranceways
onto the stage and the director uses the comings and goings of the actors to
great comic effect. Tillinger allows
scenes to slowly build to their essential hilarity. He has the trust of the performers as many of
them parade out in various stages of dress, undress and cross-dressing.
What the
Butler Saw, a rarely produced theatrical gem worth a visit at the
Westport Country Playhouse through September 10th.
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