Zany, Brittle, Campy

Two couples, caught out of love. Or in love. And out of love. Sometimes with each other, sometimes with each other’s former mate.

That sums up, more or less, Noel Coward’s zany little comedy about marriage among spoiled and brittle Brits, 1930s style.

The setting is a hotel on the Riviera where Sybil (Leda Hodgson) and Elliot (Carl Ritchie) are beginning their honeymoon.

“Is Amanda prettier than I am?� Sybil asks, quizzing Elliot about his former wife.

“Much,� he answers.

Next door, Amanda (Susan Fullerton) is settling in with her new mate, Victor (Jeffrey Judd).

“I hope our honeymoon is not going to be possessive,� Amanda says, brushing aside Victor’s need for romantic assurances, just the way Elliot ignores Sybil’s.

As soon as Coward has established that the two couples are mirror images of each other, he has them — oh, shock and horror ­— discover they are right next door to each other, too, with sometimes violent consequences.

 And so it goes, the witty and brutal war of the sexes in a society that foists marriage on people who ought not to be married at all.

Ritchie, who says he has wanted to play Elliot since he first read the play as a youngster growing up in Rangoon a number of decades ago, does a fine job of directing this campy piece. And everyone in the cast knows exactly how to carry it off, with style — and the requisite touch of venom.

Taconic Stage Company’s production of Noel Coward’s “Private Lives� runs at the Lighthouse Restaurant and Marina, 351 Lakeview, Copake Lake, NY, through Sept. 6. For reservations and information, call 518-325-1234.

Another Taconic Stage production, Alan Bennett’s “Lady of Letters,� a one-woman, one-act play with Leda Hodgson, runs at St. John in the Wilderness Church in Copake Falls, NY, through Sept. 5.

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