Thursday, March 21, 2024

Arsenic and Old Lace at the Grand Theatre

 
Last night I had a lot of fun seeing the hilarious play Arsenic and Old Lace at the Grand Theatre.  Mortimer Brewster (Bryan Harper) visits his elderly aunts Abby (Betsy West) and Martha (Alyssa Hickman Grove) only to discover a dead body in the window seat.  He learns that several old and lonely men have visited, answering an advertisement for a room to rent, and that the Brewster sisters have done their Christian duty by ending their misery with a glass of elderberry wine (with the addition of arsenic).  Their nephew and Mortimer's brother Teddy (Jim Nelson), who believes that he is Teddy Roosevelt, buries these men in the cellar because he thinks he is digging locks for the Panama Canal.  Chaos ensues when Mortimer's other brother Jonathan (David Hanson), a homicidal maniac, returns to the house needing to dispose of his own dead body which eventually ends up in the window seat, too!  Add an unwilling accomplice (Isaac Maltby), a bumbling policeman who really wants to be a playwright (Robert A. Easton), and a curious fiance (Katie Plott) and you have a thoroughly entertaining dark comedy that will keep you laughing all evening!  I really enjoyed the physicality of the performances and the cast has great comedic timing.  I especially loved it every time Teddy charges up the staircase as if he were in the Battle of San Juan Hill and when Mortimer and Jonathan each think they are hiding a different body in the window seat.  I also enjoyed the over the top characterizations because Harper is completely overwrought as Mortimer, West and Grove are incredibly dry and understated as the Brewster sisters, and Hanson is suitably menacing as Jonathan.  Finally, I loved the elaborate multi-level set (the staircase and window seat are fantastic) which includes all of the little details that you would see in a fussy drawing room inhabited by spinsters (the lace antimacassar on the back of the chair was my favorite) and the period costumes (the old fashioned dresses worn by the Brewster sisters are so funny compared to the other costumes).  This play is a classic comedy for a reason and fans of the genre are sure to love it (there was a big crowd last night).  It runs Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays (with several Saturday matinees) through April 6 (go here for tickets).

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