‘Foreigner’ not foreign to columnist
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THEATER
About a year ago, I wrote a column in these pages about the
upcoming production of “Bus Stop” at the Huntington Beach Playhouse,
and why I wouldn’t be able to review it. It seems my daughter Mindy
was among the cast members.
Next weekend, the playhouse opens another show that hits even
closer to home, Larry Shue’s marvelous comedy “The Foreigner.” And I
can’t review that one either, since I’m the guy in the director’s
chair.
When I first saw “The Foreigner” about 15 years ago at South Coast
Repertory, I loved the concept -- a shy Englishman staying for a
weekend at a rustic Georgia lodge, pretending not to speak or
understand English so he won’t be bothered, and the outrageous antics
that ensue. It was one of the funniest plays I’d ever seen in a
career of aisle sitting that now spans nearly four decades.
This, I determined, was a play I had to put onto a community
theater stage. And since I’ve been spending my off-duty hours as
artistic director of the Irvine Community Theater for more years than
I’d care to admit, that wish could be easily fulfilled, right?
Wrong. Irvine Community Theater produces its shows at Turtle Rock
Community Park in Irvine, a multipurpose facility where the term “set
designer” is also quite foreign. Simply stated, you can’t build a set
there -- and “The Foreigner” definitely requires a setting, for
reasons that become apparent when you see the play.
So, I began sending out applications to local theater groups,
offering to direct the show. And a few months ago, the Huntington
Beach Playhouse lost the rights to its November project “Born
Yesterday,” due to entanglements in the playwright’s will. The
playhouse needed to fill the slot, and president Bettie Muhlenberg
came across my application, called me and asked if I was still
interested in directing “The Foreigner” and if I would be available
for the November slot. An emphatic “yes” to both questions.
So, the wheels were set in motion, and the auditions produced
arguably the best cast I’ve worked with in about 20 years. The
downside is, the Anaheim Angels also have the best team they’ve had
in 20 years -- or ever -- so I’ve missed a few playoff and World
Series games.
But it’s been worth it. This is one experience I wouldn’t trade
for a dozen Angels’ championships. “The Foreigner” is a comic gem of
a play, and I can’t wait for next Friday’s opening night. Call me
prejudiced, but I think this will be the funniest show you’ll see all
year. That’s a director’s opinion, not a critic’s.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Independent.
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