Date: Fri 13-Aug-1999
Date: Fri 13-Aug-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: MELISS
Quick Words:
Yale-Cabaret-Hope-Bob
Full Text:
THEATER REVIEW: There Is Hope For Yale Summer Cabaret's Closer
(with cut)
By June April
NEW HAVEN -- The high point of A Man Called Hope , the final production of
this year's Yale Summer Cabaret, is about midway through the one-person play,
when Alicia Roper transforms herself into Fifi Boujeau.
Simply by an instantaneous altering of her body posture, a graceful and pert
character appears. Ms Roper changes from the main character, Miss Sally Fox,
who is convinced she is the conduit for the entertainer Bob Hope, into a sexy
French lass with a comparable problem. Only Fifi's bugaboo is the comic Jerry
Lewis.
Part of the Yale Summer Cabaret tradition -- which is observing its 25th
anniversary this summer -- is to include an original play each season written
by a Yale graduate. The choice of Brian W. Robinson's A Man Called Hope is
something of a conundrum. There are some funny, almost brilliant flashes
scattered here and there in the play, but overall one walks out mumbling, "So
what have I missed?"
It would seem, as the far as the script goes, not much. That's not to say (if
the reader will excuse the pun) that there isn't hope for this piece. As the
great acting teacher Constantine Stanislavsky pointed out, less is more; and a
heavy hand editing this would be advantageous.
As Sally Fox, Alicia Roper is wonderful with her timing and facial reactions.
A photographer of Linda Boggs, who took her husband's seat from the second
district of Louisiana when the airplane he was a passenger in suddenly
disappeared, is almost worshipped by Ms Fox. However, when the name of Boggs'
daughter, Cokie Roberts (a reporter for National Public Radio), comes up, the
Fox face becomes contorted with disgust and rage.
There are some groaners scattered throughout the play, among them, "I was just
about ready to give up hope" and "...hope is a word filled with promise and
potential."
In this case, to misquote Shakespeare, "`tis not the play's the thing, rather
the actor the king." In other words, people should go see A Man Called Hope
because Alicia Roper is an actor with talent, a lot of talent. It's fun to
watch how she handles herself as Bob Hope, Lyndon Johnson, Franklin Delano
Roosevelt and Fifi.
Credit for sensitive and creative directing is due Wier Harman. Formerly the
resident director at Settle's Annex Theatre before attending the Yale School
of Drama, Mr Harman shows he has the ability to make something that is
lumbering into a production that keeps an audience's attention. And that's not
an easy task.
( A Man Called Hope continues playing through August 14 at Yale's Summer
Cabaret, at 217 York Street. For tickets and other information, call
432-1567.)