Smitten, I Tell You

It’s Post-War Britain, Post First-War Britain, and this is a cold, uncertain world. Money is tight, the future looks bleak and the rules that middleclass men and women always lived by don’t seem to apply anymore.

As Lotty (Mary Ellen Nelligar) tells Rose (Kathy Wohlfeld) on first meeting at their ladies’ club, “I’ve always done what was expected. I anticipated being rewarded for that.â€

But she has not been rewarded at all. Her husband, Mellersh (Ted Phelps), is blind to her talents and cold in every way.

When she tests the idea of a holiday, he says such ventures carry “inherent risks.â€

“I’ve been left behind,â€she tells us.

So it is no wonder that an ad for a sunny Italian villa swamped in wisteria blossoms looks pretty good to her.

As it turns out it looks pretty good to Rose, to the bitter biddy Mrs. Graves (Joan Coombs) and to the gorgeous and depressed Lady Caroline Bramble (Stephanie Tanaka) as well — all of them, like Lotty, feeling left behind and abandoned, a situation that makes people seem vague. In fact, Rose and Lotty are so hazy about themselves that the villa’s owner asks if they are “wanted women.â€

No, Rose tells him. “We are not wanted at all.â€

The entire first act dwells on their isolation in a land where rain and thunder persist along with narrow, scrimping ways. And this is actually the most interesting part of “Enchanted April,†a play by Matthew Barber based on a sudsy novel by Elizabeth von Arnim written in the early 1920s.

I liked that first act because it is atmospheric, with thunder and somber lighting and a lovely spare and chilly set that is redesigned for each short encounter by slidingpanels.

And, I suppose, gentle suffering is more intriguing than full-throated and hectic delirium, which is how the four, particularly Lotty, respond to their Mediterranean digs in Act II.

So, the women settle in and suddenly men start appearing, husbands, at first, Rose’s mate actually  expecting a rendezvous with Lady Caroline, and then the villa owner Antony Wilding (Jonathan Slocum) appears, a fellow who can delight any woman of any age.

And by now the stage is flooded with warm light and everyone is bedecked in flowers and flowy gowns and hope.

Yes. That’s the word.

Hearts are melting and, except for the obligatory Englishman-at-sea-in-a-foreign-land scene, and an exploding hot water system, all goes well. “Enchanted April†is harmless, and judging by the audience, much appreciated. And as always, the acting and directing are fine at The   Ghent Playhouse.

“Enchanted April†runs at The Ghent Playhouse on Route 66 in Ghent, NY, through May 31. For tickets and for information, call 518-392-6264  or go to www.ghentplayhouse.org.

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