REVIEWS

 


What the Critics said about
GRIMM!
the REAL stories of the Brothers Grimm!

Developed, co-written & produced for the Sacred Fools Theatre by George Larkin
a Backstage West CRITIC’S PICK, the play received a
Backstage West honorable mention GARLAND for acting and
4 L.A. Weekly Award nominations (for writing, acting, and directing),
winning two!

 

 

BACKSTAGE WEST (CRITIC'S PICK!): (Angela Phipps Towle)

Sure, we all know the stories of Hansel and Gretel and Cinderella, but what about Godfather Death and The Jew Among the Thorns? The stories in Grimm! are not sanitized Disney versions of well-trodden fairy tales. They are nine delightful, obscure, at times funny, at times disturbing, original Grimms' tales, unearthed from the archives of the German brothers' writings and richly adapted to the stage by the Sacred Fools Theater Company.

What I must applaud most about the play (although there were many wonderful performances, lyrical writing, and lively choreography) is the original music. I was struck by how much the scoring, performed by an orchestra of six, enhanced the performances and the overall feeling of the play. Brenda Varda's original compositions add dramatic tension, playful comedic tones, and a counterpoint to the action.

I loved the use of the cello, for example, in The Old Man and His Grandson, in which it accentuates the movements of the old man's unsteady hand. Varda also adapted A Thing Called Moon, a beautiful tale about four travelers who steal the moon. It is the only tale that is sung (with a lovely lead vocal by Atim Udoffia).

A light-hearted first act brings us the humorous story of a rich brother and a poor brother whose fates turn on the comings and goings of a giant turnip (Tara-Beth Conolly). I also enjoyed The Cat and Mouse in Partnership, with Kirstin Burbank as the sexy but gullible mouse and Bil Garrity as the naughty kitty. John Wuchte was also a delight as the Flounder (aka an enchanted prince) in The Fisherman and His Wife.

The tone of the second half is decidedly more serious, with the first piece, The Jew Among the Thorns, reminding us that the Grimms' tales are not always politically correct and can indeed be shocking to a modern audience. Written by Haynes Brooke, directed by Ben Davis, and choreographed by Brian Frette, the finale, Godfather Death, has the largest cast and the highest production value, and it is suitably enchanting and spooky.

The charm in this production of lesser-known Grimms' fairy tales has not only to do with a talented ensemble cast and, as I mentioned, wonderful musical accompaniment, but with stories that are inherently alluring and captivating.


LA WEEKLY (recommended!): (Luis Reyes)

The Sacred Fools company scores points just for mounting a show in which 10 different directors and writers take dramaturgical risks — whether it be working with a story bereft of any clear ending (and for that matter, moral) or taking more traditionally structured stories into new terrain. But aside from the project’s novelty, the playlets also work well.

“The Cat & Mouse in Partnership” is a tale of two rivals learning to live with each other, which director Jessica Schroeder and adapter Joshua Rebell turn into a blues-scored commentary on modern relationships. “A Thing Called Moon,” about a group of travelers stealing Luna, is told through a performance dance piece adapted into song by Brenda Varda and directed by Mark T.J. Lifrieri.

Ben Davis stages the evening’s intoxicating, supernatural closer, “Godfather Death” — adapted by Haynes Brooke and creatively staged. John Rosenfeld as Death keeps the piece grounded with his compassionate portrayal of the Reaper. The evening engages, aided by live music composed and directed by Varda.


ACTORSITE (Kevin Delaney)

Way back in the 18th century, long before the invention of the "happy ending," brothers Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm collected folk tales for children that often doubled as lessons in morality -- with dark themes that can seem startling to a modern audience.

Snow White and Cinderella can thank the Grimms for making them household names, but the prolific brothers also published a number of tales which the hand of time has not been as kind to. Nine of those lesser-known stories have been adapted for the stage for the Sacred Fools' Grimm!

The evening begins with a spoken/sung introduction by keyboardist Brenda Varda, whose small orchestra provides wonderful accompaniment throughout the show. (Varda also composed all of the program's music.)

"The Fisherman and His Wife" is the first of the stories, with a hysterically funny John Wuchte as an enchanted flounder who can grant wishes, and Jihad Harik as a fisherman whose wife just can't get enough of the fish's magic.

In "The Willful Child," the versatile Bruno Oliver makes the first of several appearances, here as the somber narrator of a tale in which a little girl (Laura Esposito) dies and is buried -- only to have her arm keep reaching up through the ground. Her mother (Tara-Beth Conolly) provides the surprisingly simple solution: Whack it off with a stick. The playlet makes clear that not all of the Grimm's stories have a clear "moral" attached to them (a criticism leveled against them when they were first published).

"The Cat and Mouse in Partnership" is a clever adaptation of a tale in which a feline and rodent (Bil Garrity and Kirstin Burbank) scheme a way to store away some food -- but the cat gets hungry and decides to dip into the supply. The cat and mouse are portrayed as a young cohabitating couple, dealing with issues of trust. Garrity's cat-like movements are particularly amusing.

The short & sweet "The Old Man and His Grandson," is the only story I was previously familiar with. Author Erik Atwell's twist at the end defines the term "comedy." "The Turnip" is an epic of sorts, in which Mikhail Blokh is a poor man who grows an extraordinary vegetable -- and receives a great reward from the king (Jihad Harik). The extraordinary Bruno Oliver is his rich brother who hatches a plan to get even.

Blokh returns in "The Jew Among the Thorns" as a man who discovers an enchanted creature (Laura Esposito) who gives him a violin with magical powers. As the title implies, the piece is ultra-un-P.C.., but it's an example of the kinds of prejudices that were prevalent in less enlightened times.

"A Thing Called Moon" is a beautiful musical/dance piece written by Brenda Varda, about stealing the moon. The bizarre "Tales About Toads" has Erynn Dalton as a little girl and Laura Esposito performing a charmingly funny toad puppet who's trying to get her to eat... or... something like that. Perhaps something has been lost in the translation (or maybe LSD has been around a lot longer than previously thought), but it's still funny even if it doesn't make much sense.

"Godfather Death" is the ominous closer, in which John Williams plays a father who is looking for a godfather for his newborn son. He encounters God and the Devil, but decides on Death (a positively creepy John Rosenfeld). I'm not sure which is more disturbing: Rosenfeld's portrayal of the Grim Reaper, or the fact that this ultra-macabre story comes from a collection titled Nursery and Household Tales. The Fools have done it again. Check it out -- and maybe have a nightlight ready for sleeping afterward.



What the Critics said about
GRIMM, TOO!

All new! more of the REAL stories of the Brothers Grimm
developed, co-written, & produced for the Met Theatre by George Larkin

Developed, co-written & produced for the Met Theatre by George Larkin,
in January 2003, the play received a
Backstage West honorable mention GARLAND for writing and
5 L.A. Weekly Award nominations (for writing and directing).


BACKSTAGE WEST (Dany Margolies)

There's literal, and then there's literal. And therein lies a tale‚ or 10 tales in this case. These reworkings of the Brothers Grimm's tiny morality tales do nothing so much as reflect the talents of their respective creative teams. That a hanky gets "carried off by a stream" when actors fold and remove that stream of silky turquoise cloth is literal staging that thrills... Dialogue that clips along as if led by an offstage conductor enlivens the storytelling...

At Grimm's spectacular best, Wayne Peter Liebman's delectable rendering of "The Goosegirl" is narrated by the characters Book-It style, fully charged by director L. Flint Esquerra's whimsical staging and seamless storytelling that even melds with its opening and closing blackouts. This is controlled silliness: Visual puns toy with the language, while actors take no step unless it is ripe with life, purpose, and humor. Meredyth Hunt's charmingly embellished portrayal of a princess seems even better when paired with Eric J. Stein's larger-than-life oaf; Mikhail Blokh's sad-sack Horse canters in cahoots with the saucy princess and her nefarious sidekick (Lise Hart). Stephanie Northrup's take on The Elements is crisp and sprightly.

Likewise an unmitigated joy, Padraic Duffy's punny take on "The Flounder" takes us underwater, where the eponymous piscis (John Douglas Williams) tries to school a variety of his buddies. Director Allison Gammon has the actors in differing comedic runs; we can imagine her endlessly studying an aquarium for ideas. Hunt's Carp is a New York broad; Stein's jester of a Herring spouts a comprehensive fish-species-as-pun monologue; Hart's Pike is a dippy Beat poetess, her free verse recited against an accompaniment of bass (the instrument, that is) and drums.

Elegantly penned by George Larkin, "Infinite Cinderella" weaves together variants on the happily-ever-after tale of a pure girl and her prince, beloved over ages and cultures, the evening's lively introduction unfussily directed by Denise Barnard.

Of its technical elements, this show's most successful is its costume design, featuring witty, effective, utilitarian, and just-plain-pleasing togs... The original music, by Brenda Varda, featuring spiffing jazz riffs by guitarist Jay Dover, in the main enhances the tales with sometimes Teutonic, sometimes ethereal tunes and orchestrations.

LA WEEKLY - recommended! (Luis Reyes)

Like its predecessor last year at the Sacred Fools Theater, this collection of Grimm adaptations contains a range of theatrical styles, all performed with gusto. Strongest of the evening, Bryan Davidson’s revisiting of Death’s Messengers (directed by Larry Biederman) finds the Viennese brothers themselves (Michael Lanahan and Tom Costello) in a search for stories to include in their latest volume of work that eventually leads them to a subterranean vagrant (John Douglas Williams) haunted by death. Brenda Varda gives a hearty musical spin to Duration of Life, in which animals (Denise Barnard, Noah Blake, LaCares Green, Mathew Moore) ask Mother Nature (Beth Bergman) for fewer years on this human-spoiled planet. Wayne Peter Liebman’s The Goosegirl is more a straight adaptation, but director L. Flint Esquerra maintains a quick, comedy-of-manners pace that nudges this lowbrow comedy towards a higher brow. And they pull it all off with what seems like hardly a budget at all.


ACCESSIBLY LIVE

Two separate productions are currently playing at The MET Theatre in Hollywood that should not be missed!

The first show, GRIMM, TOO, a collection of stories and fables originally collected by the Brothers Grimm, who in early 19th century Germany, compiled stories that offer a moral over one's actions. The stories were funny, sad, and even cruel, sometimes setting up a horrible demise of the stories' characters in the end. These were far from being the cute and charming fables that kids were told and retold. Many of these stories are depicted on stage as they were collected way back when! These tales, many of them a bit strange, range from a childless couple how gives birth to a good natured hedgehog, from a poor woman how gives all of the worldly possessions, only to receive more in return, to the telling (and re-re-re-telling) of the tale that is best known as "Cinderella".

Conceived by producer George Larkin, and directed by seven directors, written by nine writers, played by twenty actors, and music provided by a live jazz combo to boot, GRIMM TOO is funny, sad, cruel, and still holds its ironic charm. It's again one-part Fractured Fairy Tales, one part Saturday Night Live, and all entertaining. Just remember to leave the kids at home! (For the evenings, anyway!)

THE PLAY REVIEW

A classic popular song's lyrics declare that "Fairy tales can come true? it can happen to you." This is one time when you might hope they don't! The Met theater has dug up some obscure tales from the Brothers Grimm archives and is bringing the audience face to face with these strange accounts, which have been written and re-written by contemporary writers and by now are probably but a mere shadow of the originals. Still, many will not ever make the kiddie repertoire, but could be good vehicles for a type of "Twilight Zone" or something like that, since they are too strange to make mainstream storytelling. Unless you consider theatre mainstream.

The show starts out with a re-telling of Cinderella in several versions from different countries. If there is one thing that is obvious, it's the exuberant energy the actors display as they literally rush from one version to another, in various accents, dialects, costumes and situations. After that, it only gets more strange.

According to the program notes, the Grimm brothers collected folk tales and retold them, but since some were so gory and strange, they were forced to change them to make them more acceptable to the general public.

We can see why... Of course, the average person might not be too comfortable with a hedgehog around, but this one is exceptional and manages to marry a beautiful princess. Later on when another vignette shows a school of fish who reluctantly follow a flounder, you begin to see that there may not necessarily be a moral to these tales. When a thumb wins a game show, or a beheaded horse talks, you know they are teetering on the edge of the envelope. All these are funny to watch, however, and the audience laughed with gusto at most of them. (When they were meant to be funny.)

Some stories are downright gory, others are sad, and still some are outlandish, but they all have the one common element of being done very well with excellent acting, good music and an eye toward stylized presentations. They even threw in a little nudity to spice up The Star of Money story, but quite frankly, it would have worked just as well without the bare breasts. All in all, however, this is a fun show, and the huge ensemble did a wonderful job keeping it going.


What the Critics said about
TRÈS GRIMM!
the REAL stories of the Brothers Grimm!
Third in the award winning series!
Developed, co-written & produced for the Met Theatre
by George Larkin

THE LOS ANGELES TIMES – RECOMMENDED! (David C. Nichols)

Grown-up Grimm pulls no punches

A satanic arrangement maims an innocent girl, who nonetheless marries royalty. Three rural roommates change their domestic routine only to become lunch. Two brothers mimicking their beef-butcher dad push roughhousing into tragedy. These tabloid scenarios are from "Tres Grimm! (Grimm III)" at the MET Theatre. George Larkin's third slate of adult takes on tales by folklore's cautionary brothers is a vivacious volume earmarked by wry designs and spry playing, some distractions notwithstanding.

A modern storyteller (Lindsay Frame) and her stepdaughter (Angela DiMarco) propel Larkin's prologue, "The Death of the Little Hen." This ensemble schoolyard goof is vicious and hysterical. So is Ruth Silveira's saga of "The Mouse, the Bird, and the Sausage," with Tyler Tanner's rodent, Rachel Levy's avian and Eric Riviera's Hormel candidate all hilarious.

Tanner and Jeff Folschinsky's "The Singing Bone" is a bebop riff featuring director Noah Blake, whose vocals ignite his colleagues. Erik Evans' "How Some Children Played at Slaughtering" (the butcher's boys) sees Alexis Wesley, Jonathan Winn, Geoffrey Hillback and Skip Moore balancing satire and horror, under set designer Bo Crowell's direction.

Robert Hensley's riveting "The Dark Sisters" is impressive, particularly Donovan Knowles' betrayed soldier and the title trio of Sondra Mayer, Renée Mignosa and Dawn Worrall. Chantal Bilodeau's haunting "The Miller's Daughter" is the evening's peak. Worrall's hand-amputated heroine, Winn's devil, Ryan Horner's king, Mignosa's double-duty moms and Christopher Spencer's father are directed by L. Flint Esquerra with flair.”

“Energy abounds, and the dècor suggests Andrei Serban on peyote.”

LA WEEKLY - RECOMMENDED! (Neal Weaver)

The stories in this — producer George Larkin’s third collection of playlets based on the folktales collected by the Brothers Grimm — would be gory Grand Guignol if they were played straight, but here the approach is (mostly) tongue-in-cheek, providing more giggles than gore. Some of the tales proved too grim for the Grimms: They appeared in early editions of their works but were eliminated from later printings. Other stories that have been sanitized by modern editors are here restored to their original gory detail. In “Cinderella,” the ugly stepsisters chop off their toes and heels in an attempt to fit into the glass slipper, and Sleeping Beauty is awakened not with a kiss but a rape. (One tale ends with startling finality: “Everybody is dead.”) Ten writers, eight directors, three musicians and 19 actors have joined forces for this extravaganza, so it’s difficult to single out individual contributions. But the clever and madly eclectic original music, composed and conducted by Brenda Varda, lends rich counterpoint to all the tales. Overall, this is an exuberant and funny exercise in schadenfreude and gallows humor.

schadenfreude \SHAHD-n-froy-duh\, noun:
A malicious satisfaction in the misfortunes of others.


REVIEWPLAYS.COM (Lynne Bronstein)

“Tres Grimm uses several directors and writers and a cast of about twenty vigorous young actors to stage these stories.

As a mother (Lindsay Frame) reads "bedtime stories" to her daughter (Angela DeMarco) in between-scenes narrative sketches, we are told that the Grimm Brothers discarded and added stories to successive editions of their books, while subsequent editors "cleaned up" the violence, frank sexuality, and sad endings of many of the surviving stories. Disney cleaned things up even more, as the company demonstrates in "Disney Divas." Did you know that Sleeping Beauty’s father raped her? That the Seven Dwarves are slaughtered in one variant of the Snow White story? That Cinderella’s sisters mutilated their feet to fit them into the slipper? Eeech! Be forewarned that in other tales enacted here, an entire family dies as a result of "child’s play" that turns brutal, a girl has her hands cut off, a man is blinded by his former friends, and one brother kills another.

Each tale is told in a slightly different way, depending on the writers and director involved. Two outstanding sketches use music and humor to great effect. In "The Singing Bone," by Tyler Tanner and Jeff Folschinsky, eight beret-wearing cast members tell the story of a murder and the flute fashioned from a bone that betrays the murderer. (Noah Blake is credited as director but there is no mention of the jazz-style choreography-whoever came up with it, hats off to them)."Master Pfriem" written and choreographed by Brenda Varda, and directed by L. Flint Esquerra, is a mini-musical about an annoying effete snob cobbler who can’t stop complaining and insulting people, until the angels teach him a lesson. Christopher Spencer is hilarious in the title role.

On the more serious side, two effective stories are Robert Hensley’s "The Dark Sisters," and Chantal Bilodeau’s "The Miller’s Daughter." ‘The Dark Sisters" is a tale of greed, revenge, and triumph over agony. It makes wonderful use of lighting, music, and costumes to achieve its nightmarish ambience. (The sisters of the title are mounted on the backs of three other cast members to create three grotesquely shaped monster women). As the wounded and ultimately redeemed hero, Donovan Knowles, a Met regular, gives the evening’s best non-comic performance. "The Miller’s Daughter" survives being sold to the Devil by her hard-up father, as well as other hardships. Dawn Worrall plays this role with uncloying purity”

“Special mention must be made of the great work done by the three-piece music ensemble, T.J. Welch on percussion, Michael Johnson on guitar, and the aforementioned Brenda Varda on keyboards and vocals.

Overall, though, "Tres Grimm" is an entertaining evening of theatre that will probably prompt some to dust off their old fairy-tale books and look up the more controversial variants. But it may not be suitable for young children, according to modern standards. The Met is offering a somewhat tamer children’s matinee on Saturdays.”


THE MAESTRO ENTERTAINMENT MAGAZINE (Michael Upward)

Très Grimm! Très formidable!

HOLLYWOOD, CA - In this celebration of the folk tale and live story telling, Trés Grimm! (Grimm III) is the third installment in a series of plays that draw from the original stories by the Brothers Grimm. While quite humorous at times, all of the stories have one thing in common: they reveal dark moral truths about humanity. Producer George Larkin has assembled a fine cast to bring these stories to life at The Met Theatre in Hollywood.

Containing 13 short "vignettes," the play ranges from the sublime: a charming ballet sequence, to the ridiculous: a walking sausage and his two best friends. Rachel Levy gave a funny and convincing performance as the sausage's misguided friend, "Bird."

In the musical story of Master Pfriem, written and composed by Brenda Varda, Christopher Spencer gave a colorful and comical interpretation of this nit-picking perfectionist. Lindsay Frame and Angela DiMarco played the storyteller and her daughter who occasionally became entangled in the stories. A talented group of musicians accompanied the production under the direction of Brenda Varda who composed an enchanting score for Trés Grimm!

The play was written by a group of authors. "The Singing Bone" by Tyler Tanner and Jeff Folschinsky, and "The Fox and the Geese" by Alexis Wesley seemed to be among the audience's favorites. Culminating the evening was "The Miller's Daughter" which was spiritedly written by Chantal Bilodeau, and artistically directed by L. Flint Esquerra. Chorus leaders Sondra Mayer and Donovan Knowles artfully told the story of this intriguing fairy tale.

Revealing the darkest side of the Grimm brothers was "How Some Children Played at Slaughtering," written by Erik Evans. While difficult to watch such a violent scene, it gave a glimpse of the innocent, yet wicked aspect of the human condition. At the same time it allowed the actors an opportunity to demonstrate the true scope of their abilities.

Together with the rest of the writing team (Drew Brody, Robert Hensley and Ruth Silveira), George Larkin has created an edgy and imaginative experience in modern theater. Remaining true to the vivid Grimm stories of the early 19th century, this entertaining adaptation is not for the whole family. However, The Met Theatre will be presenting family friendly versions of Trés Grimm! on February 14, 21 and 28


ACCESSIBLY LIVE (Rich Borowy)

TRES GRIMM, the return of stage depictions of tales and fables created and conceived by the Brothers Grimm, makes a return at Hollywood's MET Theatre.
The pair of story-collecting siblings received many of the tales and fables from the common people of Germany around surrounding countries during the early 19th Century. They published a book of these stories in one volume. It was so well taken, the book went through seven editions. Later versions added stories, changed and edited a few, and even dropped a couple. In Tres Grimm, some of the lesser known tales are depicted on stage. Some are charming (The Fox And The Geese), others are a bit macabre (The Death Of The Little Hen), while the rest are rather...well, grim! They are full of horrible death and sorrow, getting rather creepy in nature. However, the common folks liked their stories 'saucy and meaty', and this is as 'meaty' as one could get!
Producer George Larkin, who also conceived two previous shows of Grimm Fairy Tales depicted on stage, takes a dozen of these stories and fables, and thanks to a cast of writers, directors, and of course, the cast -- they all form an anthology of stories that are rather honest, if not 'politicialy correct' to later mass audiences. Original live score conducted and composed by Brenda Varda adds to the mood to this production. (The three piece band featuring Michael Johnson on guitar, T. J. Welch on percussion, and Varda on the keyboards can really jam!) It takes an army of talent to create such as show as this one, and they all can prove that fact!
TRES GRIMM in this form is indeed a real 'adult' show suitable for adult minds only! However, for those who grew up on such fairy tales, thanks to cartoon masters as Walt Disney and Jay Ward, and want to keep though pleasant thoughts of 'em in mind, there is a family friendly version of Tres Grimm, performing on Saturday afternoons! Take the kiddies to that one!


 

What the Critics said about
DEAD LAWYERS
written & produced by George Larkin

Originally written and produced by George Larkin
for the Sacred Fools in Los Angeles, the play has now also
gone up at UCSD.and Samuel French has offered to publish it.

The play was selected to be part of the NYC’s
Lark Theatre Playwrights Week 2002.

5 guests, 4 rooms, and a corpse on the couch.
or
The bad news is there’s a dead body on the couch.
The good news is it’s a lawyer.

LA WEEKLY (recommended!): (Sandra Ross)

On a dark and stormy night, corporate lawyer Laura (Desi Doyen) admits she’s been suicidal for some time, so it’s no surprise when the other weekend renters at an isolated Hamptons time-share stumble upon a corpse. With the deceased center stage, rival lawyer Douglas (Allen Lulu) steals Laura’s legal briefs while depressed social worker Tuba (Scott Rabinowitz) reads her diary and finds himself smitten with her. Mousy tax lawyer Cathy (Alexandria Sage) revels in the excitement, comforting the deceased’s fiancé Peter (Graham McCann) until Michael (J. Haran) arrives claiming to be the real fiancé.

Playwright George Larkin cannibalizes various genre conventions with mistaken identities, elevating the whodunit spoof to new levels of hilarity. He keeps the action moving, the jokes zooming and the pratfalls flying at a breathless pace, with the energetic cast delivering uniformly strong comic performances. Dominated by a nautical motif (including a giant taxidermied marlin), Aaron Francis’ multi-doored set is nicely suited to the action, particularly to Adam Bitterman’s well-choreographed fight scene.


BACKSTAGE WEST (Wenzel Jones)

Although George Larkin's script is hardly the Shakespearean bloodfest the title promises (I will admit to nurturing a sweet fantasy wherein an arena of lawyers battle each other until only a few cell phones and a Porsche key chain are left behind), it's still a fun show based on the Agatha Christie premise of a house, cut off from civilization by a storm, containing a mysterious corpse and a number of terrified occupants.

Lawyers Douglas (Allen Lulu) and Cathy (Alexandria Sage), along with the way-out-of-his-element social worker Tuba (Scott Rabinowitz), all arrive at their Hamptons time-share to find a corpse, head neatly bagged, sitting upright on the couch. A quick perusal of the nearby diary, with its 17 subheadings, reveals what they think to be the truth-until the corpse's fiancé Peter (Graham McCann) shows up. And then the corpse's fiancé Michael (J. Haran) shows up. And then things get complicated.

Lulu and Sage are wonderfully reprehensible as lawyers who attempt the occasional human emotion, while Rabinowitz proves a warm and personable foil. McCann and Haran are fun, but I can't tell you why. Desi Doyen has a captivating Grace Kelly quality, but I can't tell you who she is. I may have told you too much already. The delightfully named Adam Bitterman shows an adept directorial hand for farce.

I don't know who to applaud for the lights - I'll guess it's production designer Aaron Francis - but they're wonderful. Much of the play happens by candlelight, and it's not until they all light up at once after a blackout that you even realize they're not real. I don't know how those warm little pools of light were achieved so naturally, but it's quite an effect. The set (the modest Mr. Francis again?) is a lovely bit of seafoam green real estate. Babe Hack's sound makes for a ripping good storm.

Only the addition of deceased IRS auditors could make for a more appealing premise.


VENTURA COUNTY STAR & SAN BERNADINO SUN (Jeff Favre)

Question: A lawyer dies, goes to heaven and they throw a parade for her. Why? Answer: Because she was the first one to get there.

With this and dozens of other attorney jokes, the play Dead Lawyers is a hysterical send-up of Agatha Christie whodunits and door-slamming farces with more egotistical lawyers than an O.J. trial.

A raging storm, a washed-out bridge and a secluded time-share house in the Hamptons provide the ideal setting for this comic mystery. Adam Bitterman directs George Larkin’s play for The Sacred Fools Theater Company, which has forged its name as one of the city’s better troupes. On Thursdays two lawyers get in for the price of one.


What the Critics said about
THE PERVERSE TONGUE
Written & produced by George Larkin at the Met Theatre
in Los Angeles November-December 2002

An America after Plague. Ruled by the Bible.
Enforced by the Soldiers of God.


LOS ANGELES LOYOLAN
“ Thought provoking play details dark version of the future with religious extremism.”

“The plot, in all its turmoil and ethical inquiries, continues to roller coaster among love triangles, fist-fights and good-versus-evil obstacles. The story is, needless to say, completely intriguing and touching, yet sustains a sense of uneasiness with the audience. As farfetched as it seems, this extreme scenario seems all too possible.

Biblical text is used throughout the play, informing the audience that the playwright is not just opinionated but educated on the topic. The story line twists and turns, keeping the audience on the edge of their seats as they are faced with constant surprise rather than predictability. No character is quite what they seem as their facades are removed and the audience is able to observe the true colors of each character.

The Perverse Tongue is an excellent precursor of a lengthy conversation as well as a great topic for debate. The play is a warning to be careful who power is delegated to, as society can be easily swayed by good politicians rather than ideas. It warns of of the risks of interpreting a piece of writing literally -- in this case, the Bible. It's dangerous territory, as Larkin warns to be cautious upon viewing his play..

Of course, none of these messages could not have been conveyed if not for the admirable realism of the actors -- especially Maria Cina as Rebekah and Greg Good as Paul. They transported the story along its course with meticulous attention to detail and with the execution of true artists.”


THE PLAY REVIEW

“In the past few weeks there have been several reviews here that deal with the ominous future and the possible change of human values. From Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451 to George Orwell's Animal Farm, we see repression, totalitarianism and power hungry regimes that feed on their own corruption. Now we have The Perverse Tongue, about as imaginative and thought provoking as they come. George Larkin has come up with a premise in this compelling drama that is at once chilling and plausible.

As many stories of this genre seem to do, this one is set in the not too distant future after a calamitous event that has transformed the world. The regular government has been destroyed and the ones in charge now are the religious zealots who use the word of the Bible to guide their laws and their actions.

What's wrong with that, you ask? Living by the Word surely must bring harmony and respect to all? Yeah, right! Insisting on a strict biblical interpretation causes problems here since the decisions are based not on the word, but on who is doing the interpreting.

Like everything else, those in power have now become as perverse as those before them, except that now they do it with the word of God as their weapon. As with most situations, the burning issue is not one of life or death, moral right or wrong, ethics or crime. It's sex. But most people who read the bible argue that it is filled with sexual references anyway, so that's no big surprise. When issues of sex come up, they are closely paralleled with women's issues, for somehow society seems to equate sexual depravation with women.

Thus, if one follows the bible (Deuteronomy xx-xx) if a woman is raped, she is put to death along with the rapist. That's like saying "if you steal candy, you and the grocer get your finger chopped off!" If a woman is betrothed and she is raped, then she must marry the rapist and can never be separated from him. Talk about loving your enemy! You get the picture.

This story takes some of the more convoluted Biblical quotations and builds a tense situation around two sisters, who face a similar sexual dilemma. The younger one is about to be married, but when forced to a premarital Virginity Check from the authorities her deep secret is discovered. They face trial, and come close to receiving capital punishment, but for an unusual turn of events and the aid of a stranger, who turns out to be a priest and who formulates a plan to free them.

The bride-to-be despairs at the trial and curses God, so besides the sexual charges, she now must have her tongue cut off according to the bible in Proverbs 10:31. To add to the problem, Larkin introduces a homosexual male couple, in a thinly veiled a Cain and Abel metaphor that underscores the perversity of the regime far more than the forbidden actions of the men...”

“Larkin's story is so gripping and uniquely presented that it's definitely worth a look, especially since the US has recently had preacher politicians running for President. If they had won, would we eventually have the situation that George Larkin describes? Many would argue that it could never be, and the electorate would be too sophisticated to let it happen.

But then again, twenty five years ago they also said that there was no way an actor could ever become President!”


ENTERTAINMENT TODAY

“What makes Larkin’s story compelling is it’s plausibility. Having experienced a presidential election where an ultra-right religious candidate upset at least one state count, the specter is too close for comfort. As with most ultra- conservative issues, the biggest preoccupation in this tale is sex. The laws governing female virginity, chastity, rape and marriage are straight out of the Old Testament and usually make the woman the guilty one, regardless of the circumstances. The title refers to any blasphemer whose perverse tongue will be cut off!

Larkin shows two sisters trying to remake their difficult past, and when the younger sister is about to marry, a government inspector comes to perform a “Virginity Check” on her wedding day. If she fails, she will be put to death! How many people today could pass a pre-marital virginity test? OK, the third grade girls can lower your hands — this is not a survey!”


ACCESSIBLY LIVE

“(A) disturbing look on how the ideals of the religious and Christianity can go amuck if such notions fall into the wrong hands. The play isn’t bashing the Bible or Christianity itself. It is just demonstrating what could happen if elements of such are translated from one old society to a newer one.

The Perverse Tongue shows that elements may not happen in today’s society as it’s portrayed on stage, but it could come dangerously close!”


What the Critics said about
NAKED HOLIDAYS
“Naked Holidays” was Sacred Fool’s 2000 holiday one act festival.
I wrote the opening one act.


LA WEEKLY (recommended!): (Paul B. Cohen)

George Larkin’s “The Naked Holidays Opening,” directed gleefully by Alexander Yannis Stephano, is the pick of the show. A multicultural melange outlining the contrasting traditions of Christmas, Hanukkah and Kwanza with a debunking of Christian traditions, climaxing in a semi-clothed chorus line.


LA TIMES (from page one of the Calendar section) (Don Shirley)

There are 8 million stories in the naked Holidays and “Naked Holidays, at Sacred Fools Theatre, tells seven of them. It’s naked in the sense of exposing all sorts of holiday-related emotions - the jangled as well as the jingled - as well as in a more literal way. Although there’s no full frontal nudity, a few moments come close (with both genders). There are scenes of sex and violence. This is not a show for kids.

Most of the clothes come off near the end of George Larkin’s frisky musical introduction, which also establishes that the holidays in question include Hanukkah, Kwanza and solstice celebrations, as well as Christmas. The show pokes fun of its own ethnic non-diversity by enlisting an unwilling white guy (Jeff Benninghofen) to explain Kwanza.

Not all of the seven vignettes that follow are especially raw. Nothing else is as good...




what's new  |  bio  |  theatre projects  |  films  |  contact  |  home

Copyright ©2007 George Larkin

Website By KeyPresence