News on your favorite shows, specials & more!

NOISES OFF! Brings the Laughs to Syracuse Stage

By: Sep. 06, 2018
Get Access To Every Broadway Story

Unlock access to every one of the hundreds of articles published daily on BroadwayWorld by logging in with one click.




Existing user? Just click login.

NOISES OFF! Brings the Laughs to Syracuse Stage  ImageSyracuse Stage opens its 46th season with laughter as Michael Frayn's hilarious farce "Noises Off" takes the stage September 12 - 30.

Hailed as the "funniest farce ever written," Frayn's pedal-to-the-metal backstage romp premiered in London's West End in 1982 and became an instant comedy classic, playing for five years. A Broadway transfer, a feature film, and countless productions worldwide in theaters large and small demonstrate "Noises Off's" comedic appeal and widespread popularity. Though deeply rooted in the 1980s and an inspired lampoon of nonsensical British sex farces, "Noises Off's" sidesplitting laughter never goes out of style.

Set in three acts-the Syracuse Stage production is played with a fifteen-minute intermission between acts one and two and a five-minute pause between acts two and three-"Noises Off" follows the riotously calamitous attempts of a second-rate acting company to rehearse and perform a trifling sex farce called "Nothing On," a clear parody of the West End megahit "No Sex Please, We're British."

Act one reveals the bumbling final rehearsal, a process continually derailed by a wayward plate of sardines. Act two is a view from backstage, a virtuosic pantomime of precise pandemonium. The last act moves on stage for a performance where the show goes deliriously and deliciously wrong.

"Frayn's genius is to take a classical farce and turn it on its ear," said Syracuse Stage artistic director Robert Hupp, who directs "Noises Off," and who confessed a deep affection for the play. "It's so precise. It's a real joy, filled with jokes and wonderful physical comedy."

Frayn found inspiration for "Noises Off" in his own theatrical experiences. As a young actor, he got trapped on stage when a set door wouldn't open no matter how hard he pulled. He found the solution when from offstage a voice counseled, "push." As a young writer, he watched from backstage as two actors struggled to make multiple quick-changes while performing his one-act play "Chinamen." He found their struggles more entertaining that what he had written for them to perform on stage. Theater, he concluded, is a perfect vehicle for farce because the need to succeed and to have the "show go on" make the stakes very high for the characters.

When describing the demands farce places on the cast, Hupp cited the writer John Mortimer ("Rumpole of the Bailey"), who likened it to "tragedy played at a thousand revolutions per minute." Farce is notoriously difficult to perform. Fortunately, Hupp has assembled a veteran cast, some of whom have appeared before at Syracuse Stage.

Dori Legg plays the aptly named Dotty Otly. Legg appeared in Stage's "Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike" and "Other Desert Cities." Seth Andrew Bridges returns for his third consecutive season opener, having appeared in "Great Expectations" and "The Three Musketeers" as the swashbuckling Aramis. A professional stuntman on television and in film, Bridges will put his physical skills to the test as Garry LeJeune. Andrew Ramcharan Guilarte plays the acerbic director Lloyd Dallas. Guilarte last appeared at Stage in Disgraced.

Newcomers to Stage include Brad Bellamy, Eliza Huberth, Michael Keyloun, Gina Daniels, Blake Segal, and Kate Hamill, who figures prominently in the 18/19 season. In addition to playing the stage manager Poppy Norton-Taylor in "Noises Off," Hamill will be represented in the season as the playwright of "Pride and Prejudice" (March 20 - April 7, 2019). Hamill has enjoyed great success off-Broadway as a writer and performer with her adaptations of "Pride and Prejudice," "Sense and Sensibility," and "Vanity Fair."

As Stage's artistic director, Hupp acknowledges that he likes to open the season with shows that have high theatrical appeal. As the recognized pinnacle of contemporary farce, "Noises Off" certainly meets that standard. Moreover, Hupp believes the time is especially appropriate for farce.

"It's perfect for this moment when what we need and want is to be in room with other people and laugh, and for a little while get away from what's going on outside of the theater," he said.

"Noises Off" at Syracuse Stage (Archbold Theatre), 820 E. Genesee Street, Syracuse, NY. September 12 - 30. Previews September 12 - 13. Opening Night September 14.. Tickets at www.SyracuseStage.org Box Office 315-443-3275



Comments

To post a comment, you must register and login.



Videos