Saturday, April 30, 2016

Review: The Oldest Profession -- Eclipse Theatre Company

   Paula Vogel’s “The Oldest Profession”, focuses on five aging prostitutes who strive to uphold standards of refinement and dignity for their trade, while turning tricks among a dwindling clientele of respectable older men. The script was first performed in 1988 and later became a comic movie. Many of the references are dated and sail blithely over the heads of younger audience members who have little or no historical knowledge of the landmarks, people or terms and language of the prostitution trade as it existed in the 1980’s.  Though the material is out of date, it is still rich with funny one-liners and sarcastic zingers. 
    Linda Goodwin (Ursula), Linda Browning (Mae), Terry Sullivan (Lillian) and Kathy Sturm) (Edna) are friends of mine.  I have seen them all in several shows, and I consider them some of the finest actresses in Central Ohio.  But they seemed a little sluggish in this piece.  Browning has excellent characterization but she is obviously struggling to remember the lines and stumbles a bit. Sullivan is pretty and perky with good stage presence. Goodwin does a great job of capturing the nuances of the bossy, bitchy Ursula. Sturm is the best of all with spot-on gestures and facial expression. Tobi Gerber (Vera) manages to hold her own, but after a while I got tired of her monotonous whiny vocal tones. 
    The action is centered around a New York City park bench. The ladies spend most of their time sitting on that bench as they deliver the lines.  While they do a reasonable job of shifting around to face each other and use gestures and facial expressions to break up the bench monotony, at a certain point it does become somewhat boring. In general, the pacing was slow and lacked energy, though everybody did a decent job of enunciating the words as they delivered their lines.  Usually slow pacing and lagging energy are a director’s problem. In this case, I also blame the audience for much of the lethargy.  Friday night’s performance only had about 15 people, and those in attendance were unresponsive.  The cast just was not getting anything from us as an audience.  Though, it could be the old chicken and egg conundrum:  “If the performance had been better paced and crisper, the audience might have been more enthusiastic.”   Good directors and top-notch ensembles can energize each other and themselves to keep things flowing even when the audience is not with them.  
   The costuming and make-up is especially attractive and catching. From Mae’s bright red dress and purse contrasted to her white fur as the head madam,  to Edna’s bright blue spangled stiletto heels and everybody’s wigs, heavy makeup, flashy sunglasses and the white angel dresses for the ones who have passed on – it is outstanding and truly sets a great tone for the piece.  The program doesn’t list a costuming credit, so I am guessing the ladies produced much of this from their own closets.  And I know that Smith is an accomplished costumer in addition to his credits as director and set designer.
  “Eclipse” is a new community theatre troupe in Central Ohio.  This is their first production. They rent a small store front in an office complex off Lakeview Boulevard in Worthington.  It makes a nice, intimate little Black Box space which will seat about 50 people.  
   According to Smith, Eclipse’s mission is to perform established pieces that would probably not otherwise get seen in Central Ohio.  Though I would respectfully suggest that shows like “The Oldest Profession” are not performed because they are outdated and will not have wide appeal for that reason.

   The troupe has a capable, experienced core group in Smith, Sturm and Geri Martin among its founders.  I wish them well and hope that they can generate larger, more enthusiastic audiences for their work.

No comments:

Post a Comment