Taking a popular movie and
reconfiguring it for the stage can be a tricky endeavor. Case in point is the Ivoryton
Playhouse’s American premiere of the British show Calendar Girls, based on the motion picture of the same name. The play can be disjointed in its
presentation and the dramatic moments have too much ebb and flow.
The production follows a group of
women involved with the W.I., the Women’s Institute, the largest women’s
voluntary organization in the United Kingdom. After the husband of one member succumbs to cancer they
decide to raise money to buy a settee for the local hospital in his
memory. Their unique method proves
to be a sensation in the country and throughout the world. As their notoriety spreads issues of
friendship, self-worth and the seduction of money become more prominent before
everything is resolved at the show’s close.
Tim Wirth, who adapted his
screenplay (co-written by Juliette Towhidi) for the stage, has given the play
an uneven flow. There are
funny moments, scenes that tug at your emotional heart strings and
confrontations, yet they don’t all integrate to form a satisfying whole. The part of the show that focuses on
the photos for the creation of the calendar are well-written and entertaining,
but cannot make up for the looseness from the rest of the production.
The cast is uneven in their
performances. Hopefully, they will
become more comfortable as the show progresses through its run. In order for the production to succeed
they group of six women need to coalesce more as a single acting unit and
better play off one another’s eccentricities and foibles. There are a few standouts including
Beverly J. Taylor as Chris, the carefree organizer and promoter of the
fundraiser; Jacqueline Hubbard as Annie, the easygoing, yet more grounded
member of the association; and R. Bruce Connelly as John, Annie’s cheerful, yet
ill-fated, soul mate.
The pacing of the show is a
problem. Jacqueline Hubbard, doing
double duty as director, is able to mine the tender and poignant moments of the
production, but the comedic scenes don’t always deliver. They should be crackling with sparkling
repartee, which often does not happen.
She does an outstanding job staging the calendar shooting sequence. Instead of being a risqué and possibly
uncomfortable moment in the show it is done with fun, good taste and aplomb.
Calendar
Girls, occasionally amusing, through June 21st.
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