WHAT YOU NEED NOW - CONTENT UPDATED THROUGH THE DAY

June 20, 2005
 
RUTHERFORD ON THEATRE: MU Staging Christopher Durang One-Act Plays Beginning
 
by Tony Rutherford
Huntington News Network Writer

 
Huntington (HNN) — Describing himself as "iconoclastic," Christopher Durang's plays ring with attacks on traditional or venerated institutions, which often reflect upon his youthful experiences in Catholic schools (beginning in 1955).
 
Admitting the many of his characters have "emotional problems," the playwright explained that he grew up around lots of dysfunctional people. Still, drama requires conflict, trouble and working through challenging difficulties. On his webpage, he answered, "We all have emotional problems of some sort. Tennessee Williams' character all do."
 
Marshall University Summer Theatre presents four of Durang's one-act plays including "Desire, Desire, Desire" (a parody), "Book of Leviticus Show" (political satire), "For Whom the Southern Belle Tolls" (a take off on "The Glass Menagerie") and the neurotic, identity jumbling " 'dentity Crisis." The latter, finds Jane recovering at home from a nervous breakdown or a suicide attempt, for which her mom chastises yet denies its occurrence, in any event, her mom more nags than nurses her to recovery. Labeled an irreverent mix of parody, satire, theatre jokes and nonsense, mom's nagging leads to a house call from a male shrink who listens to Jane's nightmarish monologue about a traumatizing youthful "Peter Pan" production. However, when he makes a second call, the doctor has undergone a sex change operation, so Jane feels crazier than before her visit.
 
In the second long-form short, Durang updates and satirizes "The Glass Menagerie" as "For Whom the Southern Belle Tolls." Instead of a shy, withdrawn Amanda with a limp, Amanda's painfully shy son (Lawrence) refuses to leave the house to get a job. Instead, he plays with a collection of glass swizzle sticks. His brother Tom eventually brings home a 'butch' feminine caller with whom Lawrence sorta hits it off. New York Daily News and New York Times critics have raved calling it "hysterically funny" with "lopsided variations on its most memorable lines" yet "illuminating its subtext with wickedness and knowing affection."
 
Running June 23-25, 2005 and June 29- July 2, 2005, the MU productions feature Brandon McCoy, Laura Frye, Katherine Mohn, Adam Terry, David Warwick, Glenn Spencer, Jennifer Scott and Linda Barbara Reynolds. Limited seating available for the 8 p.m. curtains in the Francis-Booth Experimental Theatre of the Joan C. Edwards Performing Arts Center. Tickets: $5 and $10. Order with a credit card by dialing 304 696 2787 or visit the box office M-F from 1-5 p.m.