"Twelfth Night" brightened a rainy June afternoon.
Robert's Reviews - June 12, 2003
"Twelfth Night" Review from Robert's Reviews
Undaunted by the June monsoons that have dogged the Triangle's outdoor
productions in 2003, the Cary Players--under the dynamic direction of Herman
LeVern Jones--presented an entertaining production of TWELFTH NIGHT, OR WHAT YOU
WILL (1601-02) on June 8th at the Sertoma Outdoor Amphitheatre in Fred G. Bond
Metro Park in Cary, NC. Taking its title from Twelfth Night, or the Feast of
the Epiphany, which falls on January 6th (i.e., the 12th day after Christmas),
this classic comedy of romance and mistaken identity is one of the finest
plays by Elizabethan dramatist William Shakespeare (1564-1616). (Twelfth Night
was also known as the Feast of Fools in the heyday of the immortal Bard.)
Cary Players co-founder and president Herman Jones assembled an
outstanding cast for this community-theater production and schooled them well in the
fine points of Shakespearean diction and stagecraft. Last Sunday afternoon, a
sparse but enthusiastic audience--which had to drive through a series of showers
to get to the Sertoma Outdoor Amphitheatre--rewarded this brisk-paced
production with spontaneous applause after virtually every scene. For once, the
weather was cooperative, even if the boom from jets flying overhead drowned out a
speech here or there.
Not only did he assemble a capable cast, but producer/director Herman
Jones skillfully put them through their paces. Technical director and lighting
and scenic designer Neil Williamson provided an adequate set to represent
several locations in the fictional country of Illyria, and costume designer David
Willem Serxner created an eye-catching array of Renaissance costumes that
together make the Cary Players' presentation of TWELFTH NIGHT one of the
best-dressed community-theater period productions of Shakespeare seen in these parts in
recent memory.
Cute-as-a-button Lynne Guglielmi and swashbuckling Brian Graves were
amusing as Viola and Sebastian, a pair of identical twins separated by shipwreck
off the coast of Illyria and each thinking the other dead. David Bland was good
as the lovelorn Duke Orsino, but Jennifer Lukas Joyner was better as the
disdainful Countess Olivia, who repeatedly rejects the Duke's romantic overtures
but almost instantly falls in love with his latest messenger: "Cesario" (Viola
disguised in men's clothes).
Wilson Pietzsch is a stitch as the drunkard Sir Toby Belch, and a
juggling Thom Haynes is hilarious as the prissy Sir Andrew Aguecheek. Debra Grannan
delighted the audience with her machinations as Olivia's conniving gentlewoman
in waiting Maria, and Kathryn Jenkins Smith (in false beard and male attire)
was good as Olivia's servant Fabian.
Fight director Steve Whetzel made an exceptionally dashing and
charismatic Antonio, and Matt Schedler suffered the repeated humiliations of Olivia's
conceited steward Malvolio with a crowd-pleasing mixture of bewilderment and
righteous indignation. But assistant director Kurt Benrud stole the show with his
wonderfully wicked impersonation of Feste, Olivia's cheeky jester and a prime
mover in much of the monkey business that made the Cary Players'
high-spirited production of TWELFTH NIGHT such a treat.
http://www.cvnc.org/ - Classical Voice of North Carolina for this review and many others.