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Erotic ‘Venus in Fur’ at San Jose Stage

By Judy Richter, Uncategorized

Erotic sparks fly in San Jose Stage Company’s production of  “Venus in Fur” by David Ives.

It starts late one stormy afternoon (sound by Cliff Caruthers) after Thomas (Johnny Moreno) has unsuccessfully auditioned dozens of actresses for the lead in a play, “Venus in Fur,” that he’s directing. He has adapted it from “Venus in Furs,” an 1870 novel by Leopold von Sacher-Masoch. The term “masochism” evolved from the author’s name.

Thomas is just about to go home to his fiancee when another actress, Vanda (Allison F. Rich), stumbles in on stiletto heels. Flustered from a trying day, she says she had an appointment several hours ago, but she’s not on Thomas’s list.

Still, she convinces Thomas to give her a chance, saying she’s just right for the part because the play’s lead character is called Vanda. She comes across as an airhead who seems to know almost nothing about the play or its source.

However, when she takes off her raincoat, she’s in all black — leather miniskirt, bustier, stockings and garters — because, she says, the character is a prostitute (costumes by Jean Cardinale). Then, as she and Thomas, playing Severin, the lead male, read through the script, it appears she has memorized most of the lines.

And, from the large bag she lugged into the sparsely furnished rehearsal space (set by Richard C. Ortenblad with lighting by Maurice Vercoutere), she pulls a dress suitable for the time period of the play. As if that weren’t enough, she also has brought in a frock coat and jacket that both fit Thomas perfectly.

The play within the play concerns the dominant-submissive sexual relationship between Vanda as the dominant one and Severin as the submissive one.

Paralleling Thomas’s script, the balance of power between him and actress Vanda shifts from him as the director to her as herself and her character.

American Conservatory Theater successfully staged “Venus in Fur” last year, but this current production is more erotically charged in part because it’s in a far more intimate space.

Another reason might be that Moreno and Rich have acted together before and apparently have developed a sense of trust that creates the necessary chemistry between their characters.

Director Kimberly Mohne Hill also deserves credit for careful pacing of this 90-minute, intermissionless play. She allows laugh lines to relieve some of the tension while adding to the audience’s questions about Vanda. Just who is she? How does she know so much about Thomas, his fiancee and even their dog? Why is she there?

The playwright provides no concrete answers to those questions, but he gives the audience for this fine production plenty to think about.

“Venus in Fur” will continue through March 1 at The Stage, 490 S. First St., San Jose. For tickets and information, call (498) 283-7142 or visit www.thestage.org.

 

Late: A Cowboy Song takes us on a bumpy ride at Custom Made

By Kedar K. Adour, Uncategorized

(Left) Mary (Marie Leigh) meets Red (Lauren Preston) and “The Horse’ in Late: A Cowboy Song at Custom Made

Late: A Cowboy Song: Comedy by Sarah Ruhl. Directed by Ariel Craft.  Custom Made Theatre at Gough Street Playhouse, 1629 Gough Street in San Francisco. (510) 207-5774, www.custommade.org. January 8 – February 1, 2015

Late: A Cowboy Song takes us on a bumpy ride at Custom Made [rating:2]

For theatre aficionados seeing plays written early in respected playwrights’ careers may be appreciated to compare it with their later works. Late: A Cowboy Song was written by Sarah Ruhl relatively early in her career and as staged by Custom Made Theatre is given a bumpy ride. While there are hints of potential greatness it does not foreshadow the quality of her two plays In the Next Room or The Vibrator Play and The Clean House that were Pulitzer Prize finalists. Custom Made’s first plays of 2014-2015 season (Vonnegut’s Slaughter House Five and Albee’s Three Tall Women) were solid productions earning well deserved accolades. For multiple reasons accolades are few for Late: A Cowboy Song that seems longer than its uninterrupted 84 minute running time.

First, the play is obtuse and feminist Ruhl is basically interested in exploring gender identification in both physical and naming aspects. She also surrounds that major theme with poetic passages of love in song, the intricate problems of marriage, the effect of art’s ability to transform as well a brief exploration of Henri Bergson’s Theory of Relative Time. Secondly, on opening night both my guest and I could not understand the words to (apparently) poetic songs with original music by the talented Liz Ryder. Third, despite the attractive backdrop of a Western sunset, the jumbled multi-area set (Erik LaDue) obstructed the continuity of the 25 or more short scenes. Fourth, the direction of the cast seemed disjointed and lastly one member of the three member cast appeared uncomfortable with the sometimes intricate dialog.

The three characters are Mary (Maria Leigh) who is always late, her husband Crick (Brian Martin) who is fascinated by art and Red (Lauren Preston) a lady cowboy, not to be confused with a cowgirl. (Think gender identification). The gender problem becomes amplified when Mary and Crick’s baby is born with indeterminate sexual appendages and they (actual Mary decides) to raise “her” as a girl, give her a non-gender specific name of Blue and allow the child to decide his/her gender later in life.

Mary and Crick live in Pittsburg where Mary meets Red who lives on the outskirts. Red, dresses in male cowboy attire (costume by Brooke Jennings), plays the guitar and teaches Mary how to ride a horse. Friendship between Red and Mary blossoms into love driving a wedge between Crick and Mary. Conflict leads to violence; relative time is explored in a single scene and as Mary and Crick part Red and Mary relatively ride off into the sunset.

 CAST: Mary – Maria Leigh; Crick – Brian Martin; Red – Lauren Preston.

CREATIVE STAFF: Cat Howser (Stage Managemer/Prop Design); Erik LaDue (Scenic Design); Brooke Jennings (Costume Design); Liz Ryder (Original Score, Sound Design); Colin Johnson (Lighting Design); Stewart Lyle (Technical Director); Jon Bailey, Fight Choreography.

Kedar K. Adour, MD

Courtesy of www.theatreworldinternetmagazine.com

THE BOY FRIEND a colorful splash by 42nd Street Moon

By Kedar K. Adour, Uncategorized

THE BOY FRIEND: Musical Satire Revue. Directed and Choreographed by Cindy Goldfield. Book, Music, and Lyrics by Sandy Wilson. 42nd Street Moon, Eureka Theatre, 215 Jackson St., San Francisco. Box Office:  415/255-8207 or www.42ndstmoon.org. October 29 – November 16, 2014

THE BOY FRIEND a colorful splash by 42nd Street Moon [rating:3]

Welcome back Cindy Goldfield! Actually Cindy has not departed from the Bay Area but is back at the Eureka to helm the charming musical satire that introduced American audiences to Julie Andrews and started her career to stardom. It all began in London in 1953 when Sandy Wilson wrote a one act musical spoof to end all musical spoofs about the age of the flappers (1920s) that was so successful it was expanded to two acts and went on to be the most popular show of its time lasting for 2,078 performances. The 1954 Broadway run, produced by Cy Feur and Ernest Martin (Guys and Dolls and Can-Can) ran for 14 months and had a successful revival in 1970.

42nd Street Moon’s production has many of the ingredients needed to be a smash hit. There are Goldfield’s spot-on direction/choreography, colorful costumes (Yvonne Ortiz), excellent singers, marvelous songs, Dave Dobrusky’s fine piano accompaniment and some individual superb performances.  The problem seems to be in the casting. It is difficult to perceive the female ensemble as 18 year old finishing school debutantes and the French accents need polishing to become intelligible. It is unfair to be hypercritical since this revue is a spoof and broad acting is part of the genre.

 The action takes place in 1920 on the French Riviera mostly at Madame Dubonnet’s School for Young Ladies that include the protagonist Polly Browne (a fine Jennifer Mitchell) and classmates Masie, Dulcie, Faye and Nancy (Andrea St. Clair, Khalia Davis, Melissa Reinertson, Barbara Pond). Poor Polly, the daughter of a rich financier Percival (Paul Myrvhold) does not have a date (read boyfriend) for the upcoming masquerade ball. Along comes Tony (Nathaniel Rothrock) a delivery boy and sparks fly between our erstwhile love birds (the charming “I could be Happy With You”) and continue later on with “A Room In Bloomsbury.”

Polly and Tony

Before that happens the young ladies sing and dance up a storm with “Perfect Young Ladies” who need “The Boy Friend” and we meet Bobby Van Husen (hunky Brandon Dahlquist),  Masie’s boyfriend. They receive appreciative applause for their dancing and singing of “Won’t You Charleston With Me.” The male ensemble (Adam Roy, Michael Doppe and Burton Thomas) strut-their-stuff with Masie and Bobby in the spiffy “Safety in Numbers” song and dance.

In the second act costumer Yvonne Ortiz has a field day with the youngsters in one piece tank top swim suits frolicking on “The Riveria.” Goldfield throws in a rambunctious dance for the swim suit crowd with beach balls flying between the cast in the aisles. Later, the costumes for the Masquerade ball are delicious. But the show stopper to end all show stoppers, which alone is worth the price of admission, is performed by Mark Farrell (as the lecherous Lord Brockhurst) and the sexy beauty Khalia Davis in “It’s Never Too Late to Fall in Love.” Stephanie Prentice who filled in for Maureen McVerry turns in a fine performance in song with “Fancy Forgetting” and “The You-Don’t-Want-to-Play-With-Me Blues.”

Running time 2 hours and 10 minutes with an intermission.

CAST: Jennifer Mitchell as Polly Browne, Nathaniel Rothrock as Tony, Stephanie Prentice as Madame Dubonnet, Katherine Cooper as Hortense, Brandon Dahiquist as Bobby Van Husen, Khalia Davis as Dulcie, Michael Doppe as Pierre, Mark Farrell as Lord Brockhurst, Paul Myrvold as Percival Browne, Barbara Pond as Nancy, Melissa Reinertson as Faye, Andrea St. Clair as Maisie, Burton Thomas as Alphonse, and Erin-Kate Whitcomb as Lady Brockhurst.

ARTISTIC STAFF: Directed & Choreographed by Cindy Goldfield; Music Director Dave Dobrusky; Stage Manager Becky Saunders; Production Manager Hector Zavala; Costume Design & Assistant Stage Manager Yvonne Ortiz; Set Design Arael Dominguez; Lighting Design Danny Maher; Prop Design Amy Crumpacker.

Kedar K. Adour, MD

Courtesy of  www.theatreworldinternetmagazine.com.

Andy and Renee in House Concert: Catch Them When You Can!

By David Hirzel, Uncategorized

House concerts—what a concept! Invite a few musicians over to your house to make music all afternoon, invite all your friends and their friends over to your impromptu venue bringing something to drink and something to share, and some cash for the band, and there you have it.

All the logistics are the same as for any party, with live music. It helps if you have a good-sized living room, a nice yard in sunny weather, or a clubhouse at your condominium. It helps even more if the musicians have the outsized talent of Andy and Renee. This L.A. based duo have been performing together for twenty years, and make a west-coast tour every August up to Canada and back, stopping to do house concerts along the way. If you hear of one of their stops near you, by all means go.

I’ve seen them performing six times now, in bars, on stage, and best of all in the Living Rooms of mutual friends. Last night in the clubhouse at Pacific Point Condominiums was in its own unique way the best of them all (but I think I say that every time. . .) Not the best room, hard walls and floors with too much echo, but Andy and Renee made the best of it. The music—almost all original, always thoughtful and intriguing, and always performed at the highest level of profession and art—comes through wherever they play. They both sing, play keyboards and guitar, and write songs you aren’t likely to hear anywhere else.

Andy and Renee at Telluride

Andy and Renee started out following a printed setlist (a handy reference for those who really like a song, and want to buy the CD), but about the fourth song in abandoned the sequence, and went for the flow. Some of my favorites—”Murder on the Pier,” “14thof February,” “New Orleans I’m Coming Home”-— some new to me—“Insignificant Other, “ “Kids These Days” –performed in this intimate setting to just the few of us gathered, was on transitory moment of absolute purity, one to return to in memory, every time wondering how anything could be so beautiful.

Well, until they turned off the amps, gathered the chairs into a circle, and sang to us as friends not audience, and the evening turned from amazing to magical. Two guitars, two voices, eight or ten songs. Among the songs Lucinda Williams’ “Jackson,” my own favorite Andy and Renee song “Everything Disappears,” Renee’s unique take on “Sweet Home Chicago,” Andy’s powerful “The Night that I Left Town” with its extended guitar coda, an acoustic miracle that amazed even Andy this night out. All this, and the dozen or so of us on hand to share this moment.

Here’s a comment from one of our friends last night: “ Wowowowow! They rock! It was the absolute sweetest concert I’ve ever attended. So much talent and so much heart! I love them!! Just fabulous!!! Bravo!! What a way to start the weekend, and going forward I’ll be driving up and down 280 rocking out to their cds. . .”

So, take my advice. If you ever have the chance to catch these two on their west-coast house-concert tour, do it.  Until then, hover your icon over some of the song titles above for a preview.

Website:  http://www.andyandrenee.com/

Review by David Hirzel

The Great Pretender a winner in progress at TheatreWorks

By Kedar K. Adour, Uncategorized

Steve Brady as Mr. Felt with his beloved puppet Frances

The Great Pretender: Comedy by David West Read. Directed by Stephen Brackett. Original Songs by David West Read. TheatreWorks, Lucie Stern Theatre, 1305 Middlefield Road, Palo Alto, CA. 650-463-1960 or www.theatreworks.org. World Premiere.  July 9 – August 3, 2014

The Great Pretender a winner in progress at TheatreWorks [rating:4] (4 of 5 stars)

TheatreWorks opens its 45th season with the world premiere of The Great Pretender at the Lucie Stern Theatre in Palo Alto. The play was commissioned by the Roundabout Theatre Company in New York and further developed for TheatreWork’s 2013 New Works Festival where it was the runaway favorite. The first scene is a superb prolog that sends the audience into gales of laughter promising a joyous evening. Mr. Felt (Steve Brady) and his puppets Frances and Barney the Pony (Suzanne Grodner) are filming a TV episode of a children’s show similar to an episode of the much loved “Mr. Roger’s Neighborhood.” The dialog and puppet action with the unassuming demeanor of Roy/Mr. Felt have the audience in hysterics.

Mr. Felt (Steve Brady) greets his puppets

The time frame shifts to the present, a year after the death in an auto accident of Roy’s wife who had become the voice and personae of Frances. Tom (Michael Storm) the director has encouraged Roy to try and resurrect the program. Tom has discovered hyperactive Jodi (Sarah Moser) a 24 year old who can mimic the voice of Frances and she arrives to meet Roy and Carol who plays the puppet Barney. To the consternation of Carol who feels that Frances cannot (actually should not) be replaced, Roy becomes entranced with Jodi’s voice as Frances bringing back memories of his wife. There is a beautiful scene where Roy describes the death of his wife using line drawings on a panel board. This leads to Roy becoming Jodi’s mentor while confusing the professional and personal relationship.

Carol (Suzanne Grodner), Tom (Michael Storm), and Mr. Felt (Steve Brady) discuss adding Jodi (Sarah Moser) as a puppeteerCarol (Suzanne Grodner), Tom (Michael Storm), and Mr. Felt (Steve Brady) discuss adding Jodi (Sarah Moser) as a puppeteer

Tension arises between Coral and Jodi with Tom being the intermediary. Carol, for personal reasons, attempts to derail bringing Frances “back to life” in a stunning diatribe that destroys the puppet Francis. Before that occurs author Read has written a fantastically funny scene for Carol pitching her screen-play of a foul-mouthed baseball-playing cat. Suzanne Grodner controls the stage and brings the house down.

There is a penultimate scene between Tom and Carol interrupted by Roy that seems misplaced and unnecessary before the telegraphed happy ending takes place. The actors imbue their roles with verisimilitude and their performance should not be missed. However, the evening has the feel of a play in progress.

This opinion is sort of verified noting that the program lists two acts with an intermission and opening night was performed in 100 minutes without an intermission.

CAST: Roy, Steve Brady; Carol, Suzanne Grodner; Tom, Michael Storm; Jodi, Sarah Moser.

PRODUCTION STAFF:  Scenic Design by Daniel Zimmerman; Costume Design by Cathleen Edwards; Lighting Design by Paul Toben; Sound Design by Cliff Caruthers; Puppet Design by David Valentine.

Kedar K. Adour, MD

Courtesy of www.theatreworldinternetmagazine.com

Photos by Kevin Berne

LIFE X 3

By Jeffrey R. Smith, Uncategorized

LIFE X 3

Reviewed by Jeffrey R Smith of the San Francisco Bay Area Theatre Critics Circle

The award winning Off Broadway West Theatre Company is currently presenting LIFE X 3, an intelligent comedy for audiences who enjoy simultaneous thinking and laughing.

Cecilia Palmtag directs this non-linear, domestic comedy crafted with thought provoking creativity by Yasmina Reza (also known for her acclaimed: CONVERSATIONS AFTER A BURIAL, ART and GOD OF CARNAGE).

LIFE X 3 explores the theme that every decision, even the seemingly trivial, is pivotal, changing the course of events downstream in time and fanning out, like a plume of smoke, in its sphere of influence.

Like RUN, LOLA, RUN, this play resets itself, three times, to demonstrate how seemingly insignificant factors exert major influences on life’s meandering, cause and effect, trajectory.

Cerebral audiences may sense that LIFE X 3 is a staged exploration of both Chaos Theory—as postulated by Henri Poincare in 1890—and the Butterfly Effect as encapsulated in a short story by Ray Bradberry in 1952, and couched in scientific language by Edward Lorenz in 1961.

With the introduction of super-computers, this trope has gained wider recognition in the scientific community; its most famous application was in prognosticating the erratic track of Hurricane Sandy.

According to this scientific theory, the down draft stirred by a fluttering butterfly wing can change the course of meteorological events and ultimately result in a level 5 hurricane, like the one that caused New Jersey Republican Governor Chris Christie to reach across the aisle to accept federal hurricane relief funds from a Democratic President (momentarily opening his opportunity in the next presidential election).

Politics aside, Sonia’s decision to wear a bathrobe to entertain guests, versus donning appropriate evening apparel, sets her husband Henry’s career on a whole new trajectory.

Sylvia Burboeck—wonderfully cast as Sonia—uses subtlety and nuance in retracing her steps in the three versions of the soiree; to her credit, Ms. Burboeck is able to accomplish the re-enactments with only small variations in detail yet side-step a tedious sense of repetition or haunting deja vu.

Aren Haun—marvelously cast as Henry—likewise uses high energy and creative expression, to not only keep the play out of the slough of redundancy, but to introduce new elements of comedy during each permutation and to clearly differentiate the branches.

Sylvia Kratins—as the ever petulant Inez—elects to attend the party in a pair of runny panty hose; the enormity of her petty decision casts an irritant pale over all that follows.

Peter Fitzsimmons—who plays the pivotal role as Hubert—effuses the energy of a power broker: seemingly a nice guy but with a full set of carnivorous choppers behind his glib condescending smile.

Combined, Cecilia Palmtag and Yasmina Reza, set forth a beautifully articulated demonstration on how initial conditions, in which a “small change at one place in a deterministic nonlinear system can result in large differences in a later states.”

Reza, being French, also borrows from Sarte’s NO EXIT in her depiction of the group dynamic; quickly shifting alliances and sudden betrayals add spontaneity to this multifaceted jewel.

LIFE X 3 is sophisticated theatre topped with two scoops of intelligent comedy.

For tickets go to www.offbroadwaywest.org or call 800-838-3006.

LIFE X 3

By Uncategorized

LIFE X 3

Reviewed by Jeffrey R Smith of the San Francisco Bay Area Theatre Critics Circle

The award winning Off Broadway West Theatre Company is currently presenting LIFE X 3, an intelligent comedy for audiences who enjoy simultaneous thinking and laughing.

Cecilia Palmtag directs this non-linear, domestic comedy crafted with thought provoking creativity by Yasmina Reza (also known for her acclaimed: CONVERSATIONS AFTER A BURIAL, ART and GOD OF CARNAGE).

LIFE X 3 explores the theme that every decision, even the seemingly trivial, is pivotal, changing the course of events downstream in time and fanning out, like a plume of smoke, in its sphere of influence.

Like RUN, LOLA, RUN, this play resets itself, three times, to demonstrate how seemingly insignificant factors exert major influences on life’s meandering, cause and effect, trajectory.

Cerebral audiences may sense that LIFE X 3 is a staged exploration of both Chaos Theory—as postulated by Henri Poincare in 1890—and the Butterfly Effect as encapsulated in a short story by Ray Bradberry in 1952, and couched in scientific language by Edward Lorenz in 1961.

With the introduction of super-computers, this trope is gained wider recognition in the scientific community; its most famous application was in prognosticating the erratic track of Hurricane Sandy.

According to this scientific theory, the down draft stirred by a fluttering butterfly wing can change the course of meteorological events and ultimately result in a level 5 hurricane, like the one that caused New Jersey Republican Governor Chris Christie to reach across the aisle to accept federal hurricane relief funds from a Democratic President (momentarily opening his opportunity in the next presidential election).

Politics aside, Sonia’s decision to wear a bathrobe to entertain guests, versus donning appropriate evening apparel, sets her husband Henry’s career on a whole new trajectory.

Sylvia Burboeck—wonderfully cast as Sonia—uses subtlety and nuance in retracing her steps in the three versions of the soiree; to her credit, Ms. Burboeck is able to accomplish the re-enactments with only small variations in detail yet side-step a tedious sense of repetition or haunting deja vu.

Aren Haun—marvelously cast as Henry—likewise uses high energy and creative expression, to not only keep the play out of the slough of redundancy, but to introduce new elements of comedy during each permutation and to clearly differentiate the branches.

Sylvia Kratins—as the ever petulant Inez—elects to attend the party in a pair of runny panty hose; the enormity of her petty decision casts an irritant pale over all that follows.

Peter Fitzsimmons—who plays the pivotal role as Hubert—effuses the energy of a power broker: seemingly a nice guy but with a full set of carnivorous choppers behind his glib condescending smile.

Combined, Cecilia Palmtag and Yasmina Reza, set forth a beautifully articulated demonstration on how initial conditions, in which a “small change at one place in a deterministic nonlinear system can result in large differences in a later states.”

Reza, being French, also borrows from Sarte’s NO EXIT in her depiction of the group dynamic; quickly shifting alliances and sudden betrayals add spontaneity to this multifaceted jewel.

LIFE X 3 is sophisticated theatre topped with two scoops of intelligent comedy.

For tickets go to www.offbroadwaywest.org or call 800-838-3006.

“Marry Me a Little” only mildly enjoyable

By Uncategorized

There’s no doubt that Stephen Sondheim is the reigning genius of American musical theater. With his complex melodies and intricate lyrics, he has entertained audiences for several decades.

TheatreWorks is giving its audiences a look at a relatively early Sondheim revue, the 1980 “Marry Me a Little,” which features songs written for other shows like “A Little Night Music,” “Follies,” “Company” and others. Some were kept, some discarded from those shows.  Craig Lucas and Norman René wove them into a story about two lonely young people who live in the same building but don’t know each other.

Simply called Him and Her, they sing about their feelings as they spend another Saturday night alone.

Director Robert Kelley has updated it to the present and moved it from New York to San Francisco, where Him (A.J. Shively) returns from work on a bicycle and Her (Sharon Rietkerk) returns with a Whole Foods bag of groceries.

Him lives in the apartment above Her, but Kelley has the actors sharing the same space, often side by side, but as if they were in those separate units. Musical director William Liberatore accompanies the actors on piano from a neighboring building.

Both actors are youthfully appealing and dance well. Shivelyalso sings well. However,  Rietkerk has a shrill voice and sometimes goes sharp, detracting from the show.

Lit by Steven B. Mannshardt, the set by Bruce McLeod has an authentic San Francisco feel, complete with a downtown skyline. Costumes by Jill Bowers and sound by Brendan Aanes complement the show.

Running about 70 minutes without intermission, the show feels longer, perhaps because it seems disjointed despite everyone’s best efforts.

“Marry Me a Little” continues at the Mountain ViewCenter for the Performing Arts, Castro & Mercy streets, through June 29. For tickets and information, call (650) 463-1960 or visit www.theatreworks.org.

 

Celebrate ‘The Birthday Party’ at Dragon Theatre

By Uncategorized

 

Harold Pinter’s “The Birthday Party” is still confounding and entertaining audiences some 56 years after it was written. Dragon Theatre’s production does nothing to shed more light on this three-act drama, yet it holds the audience spellbound.

Set in a boarding house on an English beach in the 1950s, the play starts quietly enough with the taciturn Petey (Tom Bleecker) coming home for breakfast with his morning paper and being served corn flakes by his ditzy but well meaning wife, Meg (Celia Maurice).

Soon they’re joined by their only boarder, the nasty, loutish Stanley (Paul Stout).

Later, two men in business suits, the smooth-talking Goldberg (Avi Jacobson) and the menacing McCann (Brian Levi), arrange for a room. When he hears about them, Stanleybecomes fearful.

That night, there’s a birthday party for Stanley, who insists it’s not his birthday. The celebrants are Meg, Goldberg, McCann and LuLu (Monica Ammerman), a sexy young neighbor. Petey is away at his weekly chess game.

With the alcohol flowing freely, the party evolves into an intense interrogation of Stanley by Goldberg and McCann. The next morning, he has been reduced to a catatonic state as the two men take him away.

That’s the crux of the plot, but what is and isn’t said is fascinating. What do Goldberg and McCann represent? What’s their connection toStanley? Why does Goldberg change details about his life? Those are just some of the questions that arise. More come from nuances in the characters’ reactions and interactions.

Thanks to astute direction by Jenny Hollingworth and her well chosen cast, there’s always an element of tension with some relief from humor.

Running about two hours and 10 minutes with two 10-minute intermissions, this Dragon production is endlessly enjoyable and engrossing.

“The Birthday Party” will continue at Dragon Productions Theatre, 2120 Broadway St., Redwood City, through June 15. For tickets and information, call (650) 493-2006 or visit www.dragonproductions.net.