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Dear Santa: Christmas Comes Early to Theatre Suburbia By Jim J. Tommaney Mon.,
Nov. 14 2011 at 12:00 PM Categories: Stage
The set-up: The execution: Bozidar is played by Tony D'Armata with perky energy,
great style, and an accent that might be Scottish - he seems to be a
distant cousin of Scotty on Star
Trek. Equally fetching is Kelly Browning as
Octavia, Santa's housekeeper, who combines great body language and a
deliberately shrill voice to create a vivid, interesting and eminently
likable character. The linchpin of course is Santa himself, overseeing all the hijinks, and Michael J. Steinbach shows us the human Santa,
a dedicated, benevolent manager with a keen sense of humor.
His performance is impressive and he holds the events together with
authentic charm. Bob Galley plays a glib, aggressive salesman intent on selling Santa a
rocket sleigh, and Galley makes the character compelling, persuasive,
and funny. Keitha Mae Hanks plays Kit Bishop,
a young stowaway with an agenda, and she finds life in the character
in Act Two after a subdued entry in Act One. Santa apparently uses the "just-in-time" method of inventory
control, as a missed shipment of glue threatens disaster. There are
other subplots, of course, and if you care for that sort of thing, they
are there for you to savor - Octavia's unrequited
love, Kit Bishop's hardworking mother - but much of the fun is in the
running gags, the amusingly detailed set, and the colorful
costumes - I especially loved the green elf shoes with the curled toes,
and Octavia's vest very heavily embroidered with Christmas scenes. As the adult among the elves, Andrew Miles is excellent, and it's always
pleasant to see children on stage; there are a number here, as elves
and as characters. David James Barron plays Algernon, Santa's chief-of-staff,
but fails to find the fun in the role, despite finding the smile. Algernon
is intended to be officious, and a bit pompous, but this needn't mean
heavy-handed, ponderous or boring. Barron pauses before most lines,
as though the Gettysburg Address was about to begin, and even pauses
within a line, draining the moment of its vitality. One example: "May
I (pause) sit (pause) here?" The pace in general might be picked up, especially in Act One. Elvin Moriarty,
artistic director of Theatre Suburbia, directed this comedy, and found
just the right tone for its gentle humor.
The work is by Norm Foster, Canada's most prolific and most produced
playwright, and this is its Houston premiere. The verdict: Dear Santa
continues through December 3 at Theatre Suburbia, 4106 Way Out West
Drive, between 43rd & Hempstead Hwy. For information or tickets,
call 713-682-3525 or visit www.theatresuburbia.org. Tags: |