Room Service, currently running at
the Westport Country Playhouse, bills itself as a madcap farce, but the comedy
falls way short of zaniness and is more flat than farce.
The plot is simple enough. Down-on-his-luck Broadway producer,
Gordon Miller, is desperately trying to land a backer for what he feels will be
the next big show on The Great White Way.
While the search goes on he, along with his cast and cronies, are living
in the hotel managed by his brother-in-law, running up a huge bill. Enter the corporate accountant who
wants to evict the whole crew for their unpaid largess. Add in a dim-witted playwright and
other assorted characters and the stage is set for the play’s shenanigans and foolishness
as it becomes a race in time to sign a money man before the best laid plans
unravel.
In the production of Room Service
there are the requisite slamming doors, raised voices, and silly set-ups, but
they are never elevated to true high jinks. Slamming doors for slamming doors sake doesn’t equate to
inspired monkey business. The cast
performs well, but they are more acting the parts as opposed to embodying their
roles. There’s the occasional
laugh or chortle, but they are few and far between.
Ben Steinfeld, as the fast-talking
boss-in-chief, has the necessary self-aggrandizing arrogance, but he doesn’t go
far enough with the role. The same
problem can be said with Richard Ruiz, as the producer’s right hand man, Faker
England; Jim Bracchitta as the come-as-it-may director, Harry Binion; and Eric
Bryant as the naïve, first time playwright, Leo Davis. Only David Beach, as the neurotic hotel
manager, Joseph Gribble; and Michael McCormick as the boisterous, single-minded
accountant, Gregory Wagner reach the levels of insanity and silliness that,
with the rest of the cast in sync, could produce a truly comical production.
Director Mark Lamos, while doing a
good job setting up the various screwball scenes doesn’t ramp up the action enough
on stage to bring the comedy to what should be its delirious heights. Keeping two intermissions for a two-hour
show is also problematic as it deflated whatever energy the play generated.
Room Service, playing at the
Westport County Playhouse through October 27th—a chuckle here, a
laugh there.
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