Fast, Funny And Very British


It’s nearly midnight on Christmas Eve and two bobbies have one of police work’s "bad bits" to attend to: Announcing a death in the family. But instead of dignity and resolve, the officers display cowardice and extreme silliness. And so it goes in Anthony Neilson’s two-act farce, "The Lying Kind" at Theatreworks in New Milford, CT.

Director Richard Pettibone sets the tone from the start with cheesy music — Bing Crosby singing Adeste Fideles, an illuminated plastic snowman and the bobbies, Gobbel and Blunt (Keir Hansen and Thomas Libonate), fighting over who will ring, or rather


notring, Garson and Balthasar’s doorbell to deliver the awful word that their daughter is dead. During fractious efforts to evade duty, we learn that Blunt’s wife ran off with a hotdog man while the couple vacationed in Tenerife. And we learn that Gobbel is dim beyond reckoning. "You are shirking your office," he is told. "We don’t have an office," he responds.

 

So in broad British music-hall style, we are introduced to the testicle-twisting vigilante Gronya (Beth Bonnabeau-Harding), the meek Balthasar (John Taylor), his dotty wife Garson (Jane Farnol), their living room complete with balloons heralding their daughter’s return and a photo of Queen Elizabeth heralding all things upstanding and British, and the Rev. Shandy (Jonathan Ross) who, of course, is peculiarly stripped of his ecclesiastic dress to reveal fishnet stockings and hot pink satin briefs.

And, because this is farce, the plot is choked with misunderstandings, false leads and, yes, lies. In the end, of course, all is whipped together for a fast finish.

 

 

style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: arial"ring, garson and balthasar’s doorbell to deliver the awful word that their daughter is dead. during fractious efforts to evade duty, we learn that blunt’s wife ran off with a hotdog man while the couple vacationed in tenerife. and we learn that gobbel is dim beyond reckoning. "you are shirking your office," he is told. "we don’t have an office," he responds. >

 

So in broad British music-hall style, we are introduced to the testicle-twisting vigilante Gronya (Beth Bonnabeau-Harding), the meek Balthasar (John Taylor), his dotty wife Garson (Jane Farnol), their living room complete with balloons heralding their daughter’s return and a photo of Queen Elizabeth heralding all things upstanding and British, and the Rev. Shandy (Jonathan Ross) who, of course, is peculiarly stripped of his ecclesiastic dress to reveal fishnet stockings and hot pink satin briefs.

And, because this is farce, the plot is choked with misunderstandings, false leads and, yes, lies. In the end, of course, all is whipped together for a fast finish.

 

 

 

"The Lying Kind" runs at Theatreworks in New Milford through

 

Dec. 31. For tickets, call 860-350-6863, or go to www.theatreworks.us.

style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: arial""the lying kind" runs at theatreworks in new milford through >

 

Dec. 31. For tickets, call 860-350-6863, or go to www.theatreworks.us.

 


 

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