The multi-talented actor John
Lithgow knows how to tell a story.
Actually, he recites two short works of fiction in his one-man show, Stories by Heart. For almost two hours the
award-winning thespian of stage, screen and television captivates and entertains
the audience with a theatrical delivery of the stories. Stories and their power are the central
theme of the production.
Lithgow starts the show talking
about his upbringing and, particularly, how his father inspired him to become
an actor through his creation and management of many Shakespearean theater
companies and festivals—some successful and some not. As a pre-teen boy, Lithgow became mesmerized by the
dramatics he beheld. These
on-stage productions were supplemented by a nightly ritual of bedtime stories
read and performed by their dad.
Each night, Lithgow and his two other siblings would select a passage
from a 1,000+ page volume containing dozens of short works that would then be acted
out.
To recreate the wonder he felt as a
young lad, the performer brings us “The Haircut,” by Ring Lardner, in Act I. Act II’s spotlight is PG Wodehouse’s
“Uncle Fred Flits By.” The actor bookends
the show by describing his father’s ill-health year’s later and how the ability
of a story invigorated and revitalized him.
At its best the show pulsates as
when an animated Lithgow portrays multiple, rather eccentric characters from
the PG Wodehouse tale. But the
emphasis on the two stories, which account for most of the two-hour production,
can come across like a one-trick pony.
If the stories don’t resonate there’s not much else to grab onto.
Dan Sullivan demonstrates his prowess
as director by deftly guiding the actor through his various portrayals during
the pair of recitations.
Stories by
Heart, a very personal, mostly entertaining memoir, from one of
our finest actors.
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