The 2006 Shaw
Festival
, featuring Arms and the Man,
High Society, Too True to Be Good, The Crucible, The Magic Fire, Rosmersholm, Love Among the Russians, The Heiress, The
Invisible Man,
and Design for Living,
continues through November 19 at several theaters in Niagara-on-the-Lake in
Ontario, Canada. For schedules and ticket information visit www.shawfest.com,
or call 800-511-SHAW.

As sure as Shaw

Selections from the 2006 Shaw Festival

Good ol’ George Bernard Shaw: the
only person to win both a Nobel Prize and Academy Award. As a Socialist, Bernie
Shaw was concerned with class struggle and helped form the Labour
Party. In addition to these accomplishments, the guy was a devout vegetarian
and champion of animal rights. More than a playwright, he was a political
activist and philosopher hoping to raise questions that his audience would
debate long after leaving the theatre. No wonder the hamlet of
Niagara-On-The-Lake has devoted much of its space and energy to supporting the
annual Shaw Festival, running this year through November 19.

Shaw’s Arms and the Man seems a simple
comedy of romantic circumstance, but he intended it to be satire, the criticism
of ignorant people who believe war to be noble. Having received news that her
fiancรฉ, the dashing Major SergiusSaranoff,
lead a successful Bulgarian charge against the Serbians, RainaPetkoff, daughter of Bulgaria’s richest family, is
thrilled by her lover’s heroism.

As she snuggles into her plush bed, Raina’s
room is invaded by a fleeing Serbian soldier. Captain Bluntschli
is a Swiss mercenary, handsome, filthy, and desperate. Taking pity on the
disheveled soldier, Raina nurses him with chocolate
before releasing him to safety. This act of charity must remain a guarded
secret from both Riana’s fiancรฉ and father, Major Paul Petkoff.

When Daddy and lover boy return from battle, Raina has attempted to forget her “Chocolate Cream Soldier”
and resigns herself to marrying Sergius. When Raina witnesses Sergius wooing
her maid, and the romantic Captain Bluntschli returns
to thank Riana, comedy ensues.

When the curtains open, a stunning dollhouse sits on stage,
smoke pouring from its chimney and a woman on the balcony. The backdrop
captures a moonlit, tree-covered mountain range. This is just the first of many
rich and impressive sets deigned by Sue Lepage.

While the cast, led by Diana Donnelly as Raina,
is acceptable, the standout is unquestionably Mike Shara
as the narcissistic Sergius. Think Dudley Do-Right
meets Gaston from Disney’s Beauty and the
Beast
. Nora McLellan and Peter Hutt as Raina’s parents are out
of place as Bulgarian nobles; they play the parts as if straight from the Bronx. Worse, the play’s end is unsatisfying and Shaw’s
wish to explore the misplaced worship of war heroes is lost.

The second Shaw work at this year’s festival is Too True To Be Good. The inversion
of this saying supposedly prepares his audience for the unexpected, but this
title cannot possibly prepare you for what is about to occur. Wheezing,
coughing, and moaning fill the air in the black box theater. A spotlight rises
on the Patient, a girl so deathly white she gives Regan from The Exorcist a run for her evil,
head-spinning, pea-soup-vomiting money. Chapeaued men
in black suits and surgical masks surround her bed, lifting her prostrate and
carrying her writhing body. A microbe — a neon striped swamp thing —
appears in the corner. He is monstrous, measles laden, and pissed. This seems
an incredibly abstract start, but the play only grows more complicated.

There’s this rich girl, Mopsy,
who’s sick with the measles. Her mother is incredibly overprotective and
mother’s attempts to cure her daughter only make Mopsy
worse. When Mopsy discovers her nurse to be a
burglar, scheming with her clergyman beau Popsy to
steal Mopsy’s priceless pearl necklace, Mopsy decides to kidnap herself for ransom and escape from
her overbearing mommy.

Shaw attempts to explore the trappings of wealth, the
struggle for faith, the complications of love, and the exploration of self. At
the end of the first act, William Vickers, as The Microbe, explains that the
play is over, but that the characters will continue to discuss it at length.
And, he ain’tlyin’. By the
end of the third act, as Popsy begins his final
endless sermon, the realization hits that Shaw has unsuccessfully attempted to
squish all of these important themes into one play by writing a plot he hopes
will logically connect them.

Towering metal
latticework
bends and bows like the clocks in Dali’s The Persistence of Memory; it’s frighteningly reminiscent of the
bases of the destroyed TwinTowers. A cloudy night
sky backs a miniature, distorted EiffelTower. It is an artist’s
studio, crowded with easel and canvas, paint brushes, and carelessly discarded
clothing. This is where Gilda lives with her lover, Otto. When Otto returns
home from a weekend away to find Gilda and their best friend Leo looking confused,
upset, and disheveled, the plot of Noel Coward’s three-act play Design
For Living
spins into an equilateral love triangle of epic proportions.

Nicole Underhay embodies the
character of Gilda with a charming sensuality that allows us to believe that
three men have fallen madly in love with her. Graeme Somerville imbues Otto
with a smoldering passion. And David Jansen as Leo rounds out the trio with
humor and guile. Together, the threesome is engaging in this sexy performance.

The Invisible Man is H.G. Wells’ famous sci-fi tale. One may
wonder how The Invisible Man could be
performed for a live audience, without the computer effects afforded to
filmmakers. The answer is, humorously. In the great reveal, when James Griffin unwraps his bandages to reveal his nonexistent head, he
exposes a wire construct in the shape of a skull. There are very funny scenes
in which actors swing at the air, stumble over themselves as if being yanked by
the collar, and (my personal favorite) a scene in which a policeman is attacked
by a stuffed shirt. The audience must suspend their disbelief in order to truly
connect to the storyline.

Despite the occasional giggles afforded by the special
effects, the story of Griffin’s
descent into madness as a result of his voyage into invisibility is touching.
As played by Peter Krantz, the character is
melodramatic, but his final scene — one in which he appears bloody and
exposed — turns Griffin
from villain into martyr.

The absolute standout in the production is Trish Lundstrom as Millie. From her high-pitched, childlike
singing to her delivery of the play’s final, chilling line, she creates an odd
character worthy of inclusion in a Kids
in the Hall
skit.

Taking on the singing version of Tracy Lord, Katharine Hepburn’s character in The Philadelphia Story, Camilla Scott does an excellent Hepburn
impression throughout the Cole Porter and Arthur Kopit
musical High Society. Locals were excited to tell me that Camilla Scott
is a B-list Canadian celebrity who hosted a talk show for CTV. She has a
stunning voice that rings true and a confidence that is entirely engaging.

The daughter of a prominent family, socialite Tracy Lord
(not Traci Lords, the Melrose Place/porn
star) is preparing to marry for the second time. When her ex-husband and a
couple of reporters show up the day before the wedding, her plans are thrown
into a tailspin.

The spinning sets are grand, the plot intriguing, the
costumes worthy of Hollywood’s
golden age, and the songs catchy. However, it’s the performance of Melissa
Peters as Dinah Lord that shines. Dinah, Tracy’s pre-adolescent and annoyingly
intelligent little sister, is along the lines of Harriet the Spy. However
Peters, in her tight braids, glasses, and patent leather shoes, is adorable.

Although the plays by Shaw himself are the least of the
bunch, several of the plays offered up at his festival are worth the time,
money, and drive. Check back in next week for a second Shaw Festival review on
plays including The Heiress, The Crucible, and Love
Among the Russians
.