‘Intimate Exchanges’ a score
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Tom Titus
Producing Alan Ayckbourn’s “Intimate Exchanges” is somewhat like
ordering from a Chinese menu. You can pick what you like, and if you
change your mind, you can always substitute.
South Coast Repertory mounted this English comedy -- which has no
fewer than 16 separate plot variations -- 11 years ago to great
success on the old Second Stage. Now the play is once again at SCR
with the same two-character cast. Nothing has changed -- except the
plot devices, the entire second act being completely different from
the 1993 version.
If anything, the current incarnation, this time under the
direction of Martin Benson, is even funnier. Particularly the first
scene of the second act, in which Ayckbourn steers his witty,
sophisticated comedy into the tossing shoals of pure, frantic farce.
It’s always rewarding to see a pair of old pros at work, and SCR
has two of the best in Richard Doyle and Kandis Chappell, reprising
their characters (or at least some of them) from the company’s
previous staging. These two are particularly knowledgeable in
navigating through Ayckbourn territory, and their sprightly
two-hander is an absolute treat.
The play begins, as does all its versions, in an English garden
and whichever path it takes depends on whether or not Chappell’s
character, Celia Teasdale, decides to have a cigarette. Here she
does, which opens the door to Doyle’s gardener character, Lionel
Hepplewick. During this sequence, Chappell also transforms herself
into Sylvie Bell, her Cockney servant, and Doyle morphs into Toby
Teasdale, Chappell’s stuffy headmaster husband.
It’s mostly verbal tennis in the first act, with the upper and
lower class characters popping back and forth, but after intermission
all hell breaks loose. The scene shifts to a tent, under which
Chappell’s Celia is gradually being stretched to the end of her
tether as she attempts to cater a tea for officials of the school’s
athletic events.
Here we meet two new characters, both of course enacted by
Chappell and Doyle. Chappell reappears as Irene Pridworthy, a
formidable matron transformed much as Marlon Brando was in “The
Godfather,” puffy cheeks and all, while Doyle impersonates Miles
Coombes, a foppish dandy with a knack for doing everything wrong.
Chappell’s hilarious mental ungluing -- as well as her applaudable
turn as the portly visitor -- kicks this comedy into farcical high
gear.
The final scene, in a churchyard five years later, is a brief
afterword to wrap things up tidily, and possibly to let the audience
catch its breath after the merciless hilarity of that third scene.
Since there are only two actors in the play, one often is called
on to “fill time” on stage as the other changes characters, and both
Doyle and Chappell are quite accomplished at this task. These are two
of SCR’s finest performers, and to watch them in full comic flight is
an exceptional treat.
Scenic designer James Youmans has fashioned three different
settings, two of which are deliciously detailed. The costumes of
Angela Balogh Calin (particularly those for Doyle’s “Miles” character
and Chappell’s doughty “Irene”) are splendid.
Unfortunately, “Intimate Exchanges” was originally ticketed only
for a brief, three-weekend engagement on the Julianne Argyros Stage,
but four shows were added because of the popularity of the
performance.
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