‘Tabletop’ finishes Playhouse season
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Tom Titus
While most people probably channel surf or visit the bathroom during
television commercials, the creation of these pitches is a
high-tension industry all its own, and the Laguna Playhouse will take
a wry look at this strange and often-frenzied world in a
just-announced West Coast premiere.
Rob Ackerman’s comedy “Tabletop” will fill the “TBA” slot as the
seventh and final play of the season and will be staged by Andrew
Barnicle, the playhouse’s artistic director. It’s an insider’s take
on what really goes on in the world of TV advertising, and it opens
May 29.
Ackerman is a longtime New York-based property manager for
commercials who writes plays in his spare time. And, taking the
advice of authors who say “write what you know,” he’s turned his
profession into grist for a scathing comedy.
“I wrote the first draft of the play in 1991 out of the pain of
being absolutely humiliated by tabletop directors I had worked for,”
the playwright said. “The truth about these small shops is there’s an
incredible amount of sadism and brutality gong on. They’re like a
small dictatorship -- with not many phone calls and little access to
the outside world.”
After nine years of professional critiques and rewrites,
“Tabletop” has become less a depiction of a ruthless tabletop
director with his helpless underlings and more a complex, subtle
production where “villains have reasons for their villainy and
audience sympathies shift between the characters,” Ackerman declared.
New York critics have applauded. The Times said that “‘Tabletop’
encompasses idealism, compromise and illusion in an all-too-real
world of mass manipulation.” The Post called it “the best new
American play in quite a while,” and New York Magazine called it
“acidly funny.”
“Tabletop” is described as a frenzied comedy that takes place in
he pressure-cooker environment of an advertising company specializing
in high-end tabletop imagery. This insular enclave of fabulous fakery
is populated by egomaniacal artists, an autocratic director,
demanding clients, second-guessing technicians and naive wannabes.
During the 90-minute play, the actors will take the audience
through several actual tabletop re-hoots of a “pour shot” and a
“heroic beauty shot” (wherein the swirl-topped drink is slowly
rotated and raised before the camera. If “Lost in Translation” comes
to mind, one shouldn’t be too surprised, except this is all in
English.
The Laguna production will play through June 27 at the playhouse,
606 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach, and tickets may be ordered by
calling the theater at (949) 497-2787.
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