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The Métropolitain THE DELIGHTS OF A DOUBLE ENTENDRE
The Métropolitain

THE DELIGHTS OF A DOUBLE ENTENDRE

By Alidor Aucoin on November 8, 2011

The Play’s the Thing  at the Segal Centre until  Nov. 20  is a delightful  revival of  Ferenc  Molnar’s  1920’s period piece,  Play at The Castle,  (Jatek a Kastelyban),   a silly  farce adapted by P.G. Wodehouse  in which sexual hi-jinks  inspire a word play-within- a-play.   Set in a Mediterranean villa, the parlour comedy is  based on a real life incident in which the Hungarian playwright arrived in his hotel suite with one of his friends  and overheard his wife in the next room, apparently in the throes of passion,  exclaiming, “I love you, I love you, I shall die of love for you!” 

In fact, she was practicing her diction. 

the_castle.jpgThe entire comic premise of this  play hangs on a double entendre.  It’s a slight idea to fill three hours, but as directed by  Blair Williams the silliness is infectious. It just gets better and better as each act moves along.  The first act is all exposition.   We learn that a dramatist,  Sandor Turai, (Paul Hopkins) and his collaborator, Mansky  (James Kidnie) along with their young musical director, Albert Adam, (Chris Barillaro)  have been engaged by the villa’s manager, Mel, (Jonathan Patterson) to stage a show.  As the men assemble in the drawing room to discuss the art of play creation they  inadvertently overhear an embarrasing conversation through  the mansion’s paper thin walls. Their leading lady, Ilona (Jessica B. Hill) -  who just happens to be Adam’s fiancée -  is enjoying a tryst with a much older ham actor, Almady  (Michael Rudder).  In order to curb  Adam’s suicidal thoughts,  Sandor comes up with a plan to write an impromptu script, with a nod to the French playwright,  Sardou,  that incorporates the dialogue they have  just overheard.   Adam is  led to believe  that what he actually overheard  was nothing more than two actors rehearsing their roles.  The notion that the two lovers were really talking about the delights of eating a peach, and not having sex  gives the show its kick.  The result is smooth, smart and funny especially in the third act when the lovers are thrown into a rehearsal.  The dialogue they have been forced to deliver with  toungues  uncomfortably  in cheek,  puts  a somewhat different spin on their real conversation.    Michael Rudder  happily is back where he belongs on stage after an absence,   all bluster and bombast, as the aging lothario, Almady.   Rudder  alone is worth the price of admission.  Jessica C. Hill flutters nicely as the alluring if slightly dizzy ingénue, and the only woman in the show.  Chip Chuipka is  perfect as  the world weary butler.  As a model of constipated discretion, he steals every scene he’s in.  Paul Hopkins is a dashing and  debonair  Turai;  Chris Barillaro wears his wounded heart on his sleeve nicely, and James Kidnie puts a crisp aristocratic touch to his role.  Jonathan Patterson rounds out the cast with authority.   Peter Hartwell’s stage design is a throwback to the movies of the silver screen – a chic  black- white- and- grey art-deco salon with a Mediterranean view.  The cast all sport black-and-white formal wear, and the illusion of being at the movies is perfectly enhanced by Kirsten Watt’s lighting.