“The Theater Project is… a
gem, a little-known powerhouse of talent... energy and intelligence
just waiting to be discovered by those hungry for theater on
the cutting edge.”
Ellen Dooley
Primetime / Suburban News
NEW JERSEY STAGE
Tuesday, July 10, 2007
An
admirable scandal
Theater
Project
pushes
numerous
envelopes
with Rudnick
play
BY PETER FILICHIA,
Star-Ledger
Staff
There
cannot
possibly
be a
single
envelope
left in
Cranford.
The
Theatre
Project
has
pushed
not one
envelope,
but
many, by
staging
Paul
Rudnick's
outrageous
comedy
"Valhalla."
New
Jersey
may have
never
seen a
play so
at home
with
homosexuality.
There's
a scene
involving
masturbation
that
might
offend
many.
Nevertheless,
the
clever
way that
Rudnick
wrote it
-- and
the
equally
ingenious
way that
director
Mark
Spina
has
staged
it --
will let
many
overlook
the
scandal,
and just
plain
admire
it.
"Valhalla"
is two
minty
stories
in one.
First,
there's
King
Ludwig
of
Bavaria,
that mad
monarch
who had
a great
appetite
for
young
men,
beautiful
castles,
and
opera.
The
second
tells us
of James
Avery, a
fictitious
Texas
teenager
of the
'40s, a
time
when
being
gay was
something
never
mentioned
in
polite
company.
James
isn't
polite.
He says
what's
on his
mind,
and
that's
usually
sex. He
lusts
for
handsome
football
team
captain
Henry
Lee,
though
when
that
dashing
lad
isn't
around,
James
will
settle
for
Henry
Lee's
girlfriend,
Sally.
Both are
aghast
at his
overt
propositions,
and yet,
each is
intrigued
at his
courage.
At
first,
there
seems to
be
little
potential
to
dovetail
both
tales.
But
Rudnick
shows so
many
parallels
between
the two
that one
just
might
infer
that
James is
Ludwig
reincarnated.
The
playwright's
thesis
is
easier
to
glean.
People,
he
feels,
are more
gay than
they
care to
admit.
When an
army
officer
finds
one of
his
recruits
making
sexual
advances
on the
other,
he
understandingly
says,
"Well,
he is
adorable."
Rudnick
also
suggests
that
heterosexuals
tend to
have
less fun
than
their
gay
counterparts.
Late in
the
play,
when
James
asks
Henry
Lee to
join him
in song,
the
distraught
straight
yells,
"I don't
sing! I
don't
dance!
I'm
married!"
Dennis
DaPrile
seems
terribly
one-note
as
Ludwig
-- all
gushing
excitement,
twittering
fingers,
and (of
course)
limp
wrist --
but
that's
what
Rudnick's
written.
More
successful
is Kevin
Sebastian
as
James,
with
eyebrows
that
look
positively
malevolent,
and a
sinister
grin to
match.
How well
his
shoulders
shake
with
lust
whenever
he's
near the
boy next
door.
That's
Stephen
Medvidick
, who
does an
excellent
job of
squinting
in
confusion,
trying
to keep
up with
every
one of
James'
excesses.
He's one
of four
performers
who
plays
dozens
of
roles.
Even if
each
wasn't
terrific
in all
of them
(and
each
is), all
would
deserve
credit
for
changing
from one
elaborate
Maggie
Baker-Atkins
costume
to
another
in
lickety-split
time.
Jenelle
Sosa is
a real
comic
find,
especially
in the
droll
and
inured
way she
plays a
princess
with an
unfortunate
affliction.
Gail Lou
portrays
everything
from
Ludwig's
imperious
queen to
a Long
Island
tour
guide to
a singer
who's
sensational
in
warbling
scat.
Rick
Delaney
excels
at
exasperation,
which is
what you
have if
you're
Ludwig's
lackey.
Opera
lovers
will
grin at
the "Lohengrin"
references,
and
they'll
also
appreciate
the
positively
Wagnerian
ending.
Getting
there,
though,
takes
too
long.
"Valhalla"
is one
of those
many
comedies
that's
never as
funny
after
intermission.
Those 15
minutes
may
prove
useful
to
theatergoers
who
can't
take
Rudnick's
message
or
language
-- for
they'll
be able
to take
their
leave.
Peter
Filichia
may be
reached
at
pfilichia@starledger.com
or (973) 392-5995.