Theater Review (LA): Treat Yourself Like Cary Grant

Part of: StageMage

Roberta Farraday (Erin Carufel) is a young attorney who intends to use DNA evidence to overturn the murder conviction of Death Row inmate Thomas Kitay (Kim Estes), who'd been found guilty of murdering his wife. When she first meets him, however, she's puzzled by his insistence that he is the late actor Cary Grant, and instead of directly answering her questions, he's more content to reminisce about his film roles and his Hollywood career.

Frustrated by his refusal to cooperate, she gradually comes to realize that he doesn't want her help. Grieving over the loss of his wife, he's lost the will to live. Only by adapting the personality of the carefree actor has he found a way to pass the time until the fateful day.

Roberta has baggage of her own. Her father (Jan Munroe) is a strict judge who considers Roberta's low-paying position aiding the hopeless to be a criminal waste of her talent. And her live-in boyfriend Luke (Randolph Adams) is a jobless photographer who's allowing her to support him until "the right opportunity comes along." She needs to make some radical changes in her life—and attitude—in order to find happiness. Can the attorney and the prisoner save each other?

It's an intriguing premise, but writer-director Rick Pagano's play is a pretty mixed bag. Some of the dialogue resonates, but in its effort to address multiple themes simultaneously, it often feels like a television movie performed live, complete with rapid scene changes and incidental music. Some of the transitions are rather abrupt, there are a couple of ill-advised dream sequences, and the constant presence of the ghost of Kitay's wife (Christine Syron) doesn't really work.

Many of the characters are one-dimensional, particularly Munroe's Judge Farraday and Adams' Luke. Farraday is all bombast and bluster, while Luke maintains an easygoing attitude, even when confronted with his shortcomings. Given more to work with, Carufel fares better as Roberta, although she doesn't seem to stray very far from the uptight professional we meet at the beginning of the play. Estes' impersonation of Grant is not great, but maybe that's the point...he's consciously pretending. But when he drops the facade and speaks as the real Kitay, he offers some of the most poignant lines in the production.

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Article Author: Kurt Gardner

Kurt Gardner is an artist, marketer and lifetime devotee of films, especially those in the cult, independent, drive-in and just plain weird genres. His regular musings can be read at Weird Movie Village.

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