PicksInSix Review: The Play That Goes Wrong - Broadway in Chicago
The Best Laid Plans Gone Awry!
Guest Contributor | Ronald Keaton
Please allow this writer to share with you about “The Play That Goes Wrong” now offering its wares for a hoped-for extended engagement at the Broadway Playhouse in downtown Chicago by a hardy, hometown band of Chicago actors. And believe me when you read that this really is the title of the play as presented by an immensely talented, tight group of performers and stagehands and audience members, because everything—literally everything—goes wrong. And that’s the point.
The time-honored concept of farce steps into sharp focus here. There are two sets of theatrical credits in the program. One, of course, is devoted to the professionals who are actually involved in the production itself—Colton Adams (Trevor), Joseph Anthony Byrd (Jonathan), Ernaisja Curry (Annie), Michael Kurowski (Dennis), Matt Mueller (Chris), Kelly O’Sullivan (Sandra), Jarred Webb (Max), and Jonah D. Winston (Robert). The other is a list and bios of the “actors” from the Cornley University Drama Society as they present the world premiere of Chris Bean’s “The Murder at Haversham Manor” (cue: organ).
As guided in brilliant fashion by director Matt DiCarlo, we immediately sense a rollicking tone in a “pre-show” speech, designed to soften the blow of what was to come next. This man, “Chris Bean”, has done nearly everything in and for the show—Author. Director. Designer. Dialect and Voice Coach. He even sold the tickets and created the PR. And naturally, Mr. Bean plays Inspector Carter, the hero-with-a-twist who tries to solve the murder in the title.
And so the entire evening goes. It’s a cast that commits itself fully and joyfully to every miserable event. Actors playing actors who play characters in a murder-mystery. We see everything go terribly awry, and we absolutely go along with it all. One actor playing a butler forgets his lines and refers to them, written down on his hand. Another (a stagehand) is shoved into a role herself—script in hand—when her predecessor onstage is literally knocked out with an open door and is dragged through an open window to help the action continue. Still another actor/character loves the limelight so much that he allows his awareness of the proceedings to filter into his character and thus begins flirting and smiling and laughing with the actual audience. And when the set itself begins to disintegrate, well…
Please know that more can be shared, but too much has already been said. Such is the priceless value of farce that is well-done. The less you know, the more you’ll be pleased at the joyous ride you’ve taken. And yes, this play is a wonderful, expertly conceived farce, a real rarity these days. One that all can identify with. The best laid plans gone awry with hugely satisfying and hilarious dividends.
We’ve all had quite a time now in our COVID world, where for the longest time, laughter seems to be not only absent, but a bit inappropriate. “The Play That Goes Wrong” erases such feelings. This group of creative spirits—an authentic ensemble whose oneness bands its members together—will gleefully take you down a merry path.
GUEST CONTRIBUTOR | RONALD KEATON received an Equity Jeff Award for the performance of his one-man show CHURCHILL www.solochicagotheatre.com
PHOTO: Jeremy Daniel
BROADWAY IN CHICAGO
presents
THE PLAY THAT GOES WRONG
The Broadway Playhouse
Water Tower Place
through May 29, 2022
WEBSITE
TICKETS
For More About the Show, Visit: CONVERSATIONS | Kelly O’Sullivan December 13, 2021
For more reviews, visit: Theatre In Chicago
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