Breaking Free And Finding Sun and Warmth and Color

Thank goodness for Beth Bonnabeau. As Lotty Wilson, one of four women vacationing “without men� in a sunny, wisteria-draped Italian villa, she brings life and energy into the otherwise saccharine and soapy “Enchanted April,� the play based on Elizabeth von Arnim’s 1922 novel, now in an appealing production at The Sherman Playhouse.

   Oddly, the book was first a 1992 movie — Mike Newell’s lush, light-filled concoction starring the great Joan Plowright and Miranda Richardson — and then a play, first produced at Hartford Stage Company.  Von Arnim’s slight but lovely prose may well have taken second fiddle to the splendors of Portofino, Newell’s chosen location, but the film was delicious in a sort of wedding-cake way. 

   The plot is simple:  Four English ladies, previously unknown to each other, rent the  villa for the month of April.  Each is emotionally strait-jacketed in a different way, and each finds “herselfâ€� during the idyll, which takes on the (modest here) antics of country-house farce in the play’s denouement. 

   Lotty, who instigates the Italian scheme, and Rose (Stacy-Lee Erickson),  her new friend from their women’s club, are the main characters. Lotty, a caged free spirit, is in emotional thrall to her lawyer husband; Rose — substituting religion for life — doesn’t appreciate her husband’s success as a popular writer and nags him to return to poetry.  But both women love their mates, a point they rediscover in Italy. The other renters — an ingenue Lady Caroline Bramble (Alison Bernhardt),  and the elderly Mrs. Graves (Katherine Almquist) — are shallow stereotypes, too, but they complement Lotty and Rose, one with languid youth and the other with pinched maturity.

   The Sherman players have produced a pleasant version of the play.  Act I, set in England, is made up of short scenes that introduce the characters and their Italian plans. The sets are minimal at best.  But when the curtain opens on the villa in Act II, Bill and Susan Abrams’ stunning set evokes the sun and warmth and color of coastal Italy.

   Susan Abrams, who also directed, has emphasized the humor — much of it traditional antics of the Englishman-abroad school — and sweetness of the story. 

   And all her actors are fine: The two husbands and the villa’s owner (Jim Lones, Viv Berger from last season’s “Gaslight,â€� and James Hipp) are right for their roles, although Lones wraps himself in a large towel after the scalding-bath scene rather than bare his bottom as happened on Broadway.

   And Paula Anderson gives the Italian maid, Costanza, the zing of that famous Italian wine-making episode of “I Love Lucy.â€�

   “Enchanted Aprilâ€� is innocuous, and in this production, a pleasant way to spend two hours. 

 By the way, the playhouse has a newly renovated “green roomâ€� that offers both air conditioning and drinks and snacks.

     “Enchanted Aprilâ€� plays at the Sherman Playhouse weekends through May 15. Call 860-354-3622.

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