Smoke and Marys
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Young Chang
The prop crew for “The Lonesome West” at South Coast Repertory is
confident they can make the stove -- an important prop in the show --
look great once. But 40 times?
For that, they need special effects involving everything from air
pistons to a substance called Fuller’s Smoke and a little bit of luck.
“Every show has a certain amount of dressing,” said John Slauson, prop
carpenter. “In this case, some of the props needed to do tricks.”
The Martin McDonagh comedy, which will be staged through April 15 on
SCR’s Second Stage, tells the tale of two brothers -- Coleman and Valene
-- who are caught in an extreme case of sibling rivalry.
The Irish play, which is staged on a space about as big as an average
living room, calls for special effects during each of the show’s 40
performances in full view of closely sitting, doubting eyes.
The most striking stunt is probably what happens to the odd, Valencia
orange-colored stove Valene brings home. He forbids Coleman from using it
and gloats over the new purchase.
Coleman throws open the oven door during a particularly heated fight
and shoots it twice with his gun.
A side panel blows off, as do several stove-top burners, and smoke
erupts from the back of the appliance.
“You buy into it,” said prop master Scott Schreck. “But there are no
explosives.”
Instead, a half-load blank gun is shot backstage for the sound effect.
Upon the first firing, the stove is designed to rock side to side and
blow out plumes of smoke. With the second shot, it shakes off a side
panel, rocks some more, blows out more smoke and pops off the two back
burners.
The rising plumes are made of a gray-colored makeup powder called
Fuller’s smoke.
“This is a big Second Stage show. Designers think, why bother [with
special effects] on a big stage? But the person sitting on that seat
right there,” said Schreck, pointing to the furthest seat in the house,
“is going to be affected by the stove.”
And by a few other shocks.
In one scene, Coleman sweeps Valene’s religious figurines of the
Virgin Mary into a pot and cooks them in the oven. The devastated brother
later discovers this mess. It’s a smoking brew -- back stage, crews have
switched pots through a hidden stove door -- created with a cornstarch
mixture and dry ice.
The priest in the show -- a character burdened by the world’s
ugliness, including the two brothers’ hatred for each other -- eventually
shoves his hands into the supposedly scalding mixture of molten plastic
and screams.
But the Mary figures endure yet more abuse. Toward the end of the
play, Coleman sweeps them all into what resembles a duffel bag and swings
them against a table. Smashing sounds are heard and for all the audience
knows, the figurines are being shattered.
The trick? Forty glass bowls scored down the middle so they break for
sure each time and more than 200 flexible, rubber figurines that prop
crew members stumbled upon after trying other failed alternatives. The
bowl in the bag shatters into pieces every night and the Marys remain
intact.
“The first batch of figurines didn’t work as well as we’d hoped,”
Slauson said. “They were still getting broken.”
A final backstage note: The brothers smash about five bags of potato
chips a night during their wild, throw-down fights. Called “Taytos,” the
chips were ordered from Ireland by the case. The final count makes for
exactly 200 individual bags.
“We tried to make everything else so that it doesn’t break or it
breaks so infrequently, we only have to replace it once,” Schreck said.
FYI
WHAT: “The Lonesome West”
WHEN: 7:45 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday, 2 p.m. Saturday and Sunday,
through April 15
WHERE: South Coast Repertory’s Second Stage, 655 Town Center Drive,
Costa MesaCOST: $26-$47
CALL: (714) 708-5555
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