Special to The Telegram
You know those comic melodramas set in an old English country-house
full of heraldic devices, suits of armour, hidden treasures
in the wainscotting, mortgages to be foreclosed, faithful
family retainers, virtuous maidens, bearded villains, and
long-lost relatives returned from the Colonies? Well, The
Mumberley Inheritance is unabashedly one of those.
The plot involves a geriatric, debt-plagued lord of the
manor (Clar Doyle), a diabolical villain in red-lined cloak
(Gord Ralp), who has something on everyone and lusts after
the virtuous heroine (Sharon Tracey). Our villain is assisted
by his cringing accomplice (Kevin Lewis) and resisted by
the stout-hearted hero (Mike Coady), with the aid of a long-lost
brother returned from the Canadas after six long years to
reclaim his erstwhile sweetheart (Jackie Dawe), who just
happens to have been recently engaged as a nurse in the
Mumberley household.
In the end, as you might expect, the villain is foiled,
the family treasure is recovered, and the hero called Rodney
Stoutheart prevails, after a prolonged, silent-film chase
scene to flickering lights, onstage and through the auditorium.
Truth and love triumph. Even the villain's sidekick finds
true love with Dotty the Maid (Marianne Butler).
Mounting a lampoon of such a hoary theatrical formula,
you need a solidly plausible set, with wainscotting that
hides secrets and various architectural orifices from which
people can variously emerge - which is a feature you can
generally rely upon with a production by this particular
company. Designed by Clar Doyle and constructed by the cast
and members of the Doyle clan, the well- sculpted and well-dressed
set fills the stage effortlessly, elegantly, functionally.
No doubt The Mumberley Inheritance is a far-fetched and
unlikely dramatic vehicle. So is a unicycle. The fun consists
in watching many and varied unicyclists doing their stuff.
It may not cure ringworm or the falling sickness - but it
can do you a power of good.
But last night, despite strong production values and strong
performances, it did not quite work the magic that it can.
In this kind of over-the-top, audience-interactive show,
there is one thing you need first and foremost - an audience.
Where was everybody? Had they all blown their wad on My
Fair Lady? Unfortunately, an audience of 25 or 30 in a large
auditorium does not generate the feedback a show like this
needs.
Without an audience to respond, the asides and grimaces,
the emphatic stage business, the running jokes requiring
voices off and/or audience participation, the send-ups of
nineteenth-century conventions, these land heavily and sometimes
hollowly.
Even with an interactive audience, some of the business
is signalled and underlined too heavily for my taste. With
the smaller audience, a quicker, more legatto approach might
have been preferable. And I could certainly have dispensed
with the over- facetious introduction of the macarena.
I enjoyed the production and the performance more than
some of these remarks make it sound. I especially relished
Clar Doyle's kindly, nostalgic, lecherous old man, Sharon
Tracey's virtuous heroine that never jumps out of context,
the Pretty Polly Nurse of Jackie Dawe, and the straight-ahead
virtue of Mike Coady's Stoutheart. Likewise the lighting
effects and the live musical accompaniment to accentuate
the jokes, the sentiment and the business.
Perhaps what I am saying is simply that laughter begets
laughter, reaction begets reaction. What the production
needs most is more people to be laughing along with one
another to carry it effortlessly to its conclusion without
our counting the fence-posts on the way.
Directed by Kevin Lewis, the Beothuck Street Players production
of Warren Graves's The Mumberley Inheritance continues at
the Holy Heart of Mary auditorium until Saturday, November
23, starting at 8 pm, with old-fashioned piano accompaniment
provided by Brian Way to take you back to the era of melodrama
with live musical accompaniment.