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Friday, September 21, 2018

Day 299 The Play that Goes Wrong- Broadway in Pittsburgh - Classic Physical Comedy- Combustion of Set and of Laughter




The Play That Goes Wrong  is a Tony Award winning Broadway comedy about  the Cornley University Drama Society’s attempt to put on a 1920’s murder mystery production when obviously- everything that could go wrong, does go wrong.   As a lover of the theater and a former high school and college actor/thespian, I know firsthand the trials encountered during show production. In The Play that Goes Wrong, everything on  the set seems to combust and so does the audience with laughter in this classic physical comedy.



Reflection
I had reservations about going to a non musical comedy because it takes a lot for this girl to laugh. This play could have fit perfectly into a skit on the 70’s iconic  Carol Burnett Show which used quirky characters and physical  comedy to elicit waves of laughter.  It  had all the elements of  a flash back classic comedy, people falling, getting hit by doors, things failing to work, actors forgetting lines, missing props   and more.  It was hysterical  because there is something that tickles our funny bone when we watch “things going wrong”. Look at the popularity of television shows “Bloopers” and “America’s Funniest Video”. This play was the race track of non-stop "things going wrong". 


As you enter the theater, you  get a  teaser of  what is going to go south  during the  Cornley University Drama Society’s   murder mystery  production of “The Murder at Haversham Manor”.   The Stage Manager (Angela Grovey)  and the Lighting and Sound Operator (Brandon J. Ellis) frantically try to make last minute adjustments to the faulty  set. There is even audience participation  to hold the set together.   The Play That Goes Wrong  starts out  “wrong”. We were greeted with bursts of audience pre-show laughter as we took our seats.   

The drama  society’s production,“The Murder at Haversham Manor”, prompted a flashback memory of  playing  the Milton Bradly board game “Clue” with characters Professor Plum and the gang.  The audience really does not pay much attention to  what is going on in their play because everyone is focused on the actor's hysterical attempts to overcome the continuous obstacles of the production.

 The fictitious actor, Dennis Tyde (Scott Cote) can’t remember his lines and mispronounces the words scribbled on his hand.   Max Bennet (Ned Noyes)  pantomimes his lines like he is playing  Charades. Chris Bean (Even Alexander Smith) is a genius of physical comedy as he holds up the loose props falling off the wall by manipulating his tall body like he is involved in a game of Twister. It keeps going and the audience keeps laughing. 



 The mishaps climax when the entire set seems to combust with collapsing walls, lights, props and  the set's second story floor. The  audience explodes with laughter as the actors press forward  to  reach the final curtain call!  The Play that Goes Wrong goes so very  right by giving us a hysterical  night of comedy.


 (The Play that Goes Wrong runs from September 18 through September 23, 2018 at the Benedum Center for the Arts. For Tickets and for upcoming shows in the Pittsburgh Broadway series go to trustarts.org ).


Other sources
Pittsburgh Cultural Trust trustarts.org