Credit: Bianca Badia

Credit: Bianca Badia
When two of the Bay area’s best actors turn in performances so extreme they don’t even seem human, you’ve got to wonder about their director. When a well-loved contemporary farce is played at such a manic pace that it stops being funny, the same culprit comes to mind: The frenetic show’s director. And when elements of slapstick so old-fashioned they seem ancient inevitably fail to get a laugh, you can only conclude: Blame the director. And that should be the end of it — except that the director, in this case, is the talented Jack Holloway, himself an inspired actor who for years has provided local audiences with finely-wrought portrayals in everything from Shakespeare to Lanford Wilson. Bafflement and perplexity: Can Holloway really be responsible for this hyperactive convulsion? What if — just what if — he’s been replaced by an impostor who looks and sounds exactly like him? In other words, what if the plot of Ken Ludwig’s Lend Me A Tenor has been duplicated in the rehearsal rooms of Ruth Eckerd Hall’s Murray Theatre? What if — follow me on this now — Jack Holloway is not Jack Holloway?

The evidence is everywhere. It starts with Brian Shea, three-time Best of the Bay-winner and one of the most versatile performers the Bay area has ever known, playing the head of the Cleveland Grand Opera Company as if on amphetamines. Worrying that the evening’s opera star, Tito Merelli, is late for rehearsal, Shea’s Saunders shouts, suffers, agonizes so loudly, you’d think he was already at the end of an operatic crescendo. But wait: There’s Jamie Jones, an actor who in past shows has demonstrated a genius for satire — and he’s lunging from place to place, jumping over furniture, emoting so exaggeratedly, he’s almost foaming with adrenaline. Jones, we learn, is Saunders’ assistant, a man so hyper-physical, his merest grimace touches all three of the set’s walls. After a while, Tito himself enters — looking, thanks to costumer Gi Sung, like a slightly disheveled college student — and of course Maxx Janeda plays him as a stereotypical Italian hothead, excessive, extravagant, at the end of his tether. He’s accompanied by his wife Maria who, as played by Sarah Pullman-Atanacio, is loud, angry, volatile—

Wait: I want to pull back. In fact, Pullman-Atanacio is excellent as Maria, who, is and should be all those things I said about her a couple of sentences ago. She only seems hard to take because almost everyone on stage so far has been equally volcanic, and naturally a simple audience member yearns for a little relief. Yearns that is, for a plot that goes something like this: Into the recognizably human world of opera head Saunders and his beleaguered assistant Max come overemotional superstar Tito Morelli and his unpredictable wife. When Saunders and Max think that Tito has committed suicide, they hatch a plot to replace him with an untried ringer. As this ringer comes to enjoy the many perks of an opera celebrity, he begins to fulfill his long-suppressed appetites; and when the real Tito comes back into the picture, everything goes haywire. Big, loud, funny ending. Well-earned.

Credit: Bianca Badia

But you can’t go from zero to 60 when you start at 110, so all the wildness of the play’s finish, in this version, doesn’t feel like any sort of development. And still there are three performances in Tenor that remind us of what might have been. First there’s Brianna Larson as Maggie, Saunders’ daughter, beloved by Max but with a yen for Tito. Larson plays farce the way it ought to be played: amplified, silly, but flesh and blood all the way. Then there’s Erica Garraffa as Diana, a promiscuous soprano who sees Tito as her ticket to the Met. I wasn’t bowled over by Garraffa’s acting, but I respect the quiet restraint with which she approaches a part that could easily turn into a caricature. And then, to risk repeating myself, there’s Pullman-Atanacio as Maria — her strong emotions are as believable as every other feature of her work. Janeda as Tito is intermittently credible, but David Barrow never seems the bellhop he plays, and Roz Potenza in a small role joins in the general excess. Shawna Colville’s modern hotel set is happily attractive, and some of Sung’s costumes — Saunders’ tuxedo, for example — make more sense than others.

Anyway, there’s the evidence: A misconceived production that in no way could be the product of Jack Holloway’s fine imagination. There’s a irony at work: behind Lend Me A Tenor, someone’s playing Lend Me A Director. It’s the only explanation.

A clever gambit, Hat Trick Theatre. But ultimately: transparent.

 


  

Lend Me a Tenor

Two of five stars

Laughing Stock, Murray Theatre, Ruth Eckerd Hall

1111 N. McMullen Booth Rd., Clearwater

Through Feb. 12: Thurs.-Sun., 7:30 p.m.; Sun., 3 pm..

$24

727-791-7400 rutheckerdhall.com