Academy will catch ‘Hay Fever’ this weekend
Tom Titus
Having reached back into theatrical history for its fall musical,
“42nd Street,” the Academy for the Performing Arts at Huntington
Beach High School is going back even further for its next production,
which opens tonight.
“42nd Street” was a product of the 1930s, and the academy’s latest
project -- Noel Coward’s “Hay Fever” -- is set in the 1920s, offering
a taste of the sophisticated English humor so prevalent in that
period.
“Hay Fever” -- which runs tonight through Sunday only -- focuses
on the Bliss family of highborn Bohemian eccentrics. There’s Judith,
a flamboyant actress; David, her author husband, and their two
teen-age children, Simon and Sorel, who inhabit their own
individualistic world. Each family member has invited a guest for the
weekend -- without notifying the rest of the clan -- and the result
is predictable pandemonium, an entertaining weekend filled with many
romantic twists and turns.
“Some say the play was inspired by Laurette Taylor, a good friend
of Coward’s and a noted American actress,” director Earl Byers said.
Taylor probably was most famous for creating the role of Amanda
Wingfield in Tennessee Williams’ first play, “The Glass Menagerie.”
Commenting on Coward, who was a frequent houseguest, and his gift
for words, Taylor is quoted as saying, “He never had to search for
the right one; they came effortlessly to his obvious delight as well
as that of the listener.”
Byers, who counts “Hay Fever” as one of his favorite plays, is
predicting that this “obvious delight” will be reflected from the
stage of Huntington Beach High School this weekend.
Comprising the Bliss family characters will be Kelly Dixon as
Judith, Alex Malcynski as David, AJ Gutierrez as Simon and Nicole
Weber as Sorel. The diverse guests will be played by Ryan Field, Dani
Kerry, Alessandro Randazzo and Amanda Bolten.
Curtain time is 7:30 tonight, Friday and Saturday, with a 2 p.m.
matinee Sunday in the high school theater, 1905 Main St., Huntington
Beach. Tickets are $9 for general admission and $7 for students. More
information is available at (714) 536-2514, ext. 602.
“What keeps Noel Coward’s comedy alive after more than 60 years?”
Byers said. “Obviously his deft plotting, musical language and those
dynamic and flamboyant characters that every actor worth his salt
wants to play again and again.”
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Independent.
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