Season 9

2010 - 2011

August: Osage County

by Tracy Letts

October 14 - November 7, 2010
Maine Premiere

A vanished father. A pill-popping mother. Three sisters harboring shady little secrets. When the large Weston family unexpectedly reunites after Dad disappears, their Oklahoman family homestead explodes in a maelstrom of repressed truths and unsettling secrets. A major new play that unflinchingly - and uproariously - exposes the dark side of the Midwestern American family.

  • Violet - Lisa Stathoplos
    Beverly - Chris Horton
    Barbara - Kathleen Kimball
    Bill - Mark Rubin
    Jean - Emma Banks
    Mattie Fae - Cynthia Barnett*
    Charlie - Charles Michael Howard*
    Little Charles - Brent Askari
    Ivy - Amy Roche
    Karen - Janice Gardner
    Steve - Paul Drinan
    Sheriff Deon - David Branch
    Johnna - Kate Davis

    Director - Brian P. Allen^
    Set Design - Stephen Underwood
    Lighting Design - Jamie Grant
    Costume Design - Justin Cote
    Stage Manager - Joshua Hurd
    Scenic Artist - Janet Montgomery
    Assistant Tech Director/Photographer - Craig Robinson

    * Member Actors' Equity Association
    ^ Member SDC, Society of Directors & Choreographers

  • Theatre highlights of 2010 - "August" was tops
    By MEGAN GRUMBLING | December 22, 2010

    In my local orbits among both actors and theater-goers, one play of 2010 continues to be regularly hailed in conversation: GOOD THEATER's momentous production of August: Osage County, a profane and exceptionally funny foray into Middle American generational pathos. Tracy Letts's superbly harrowing script deserves all the praise it's reaped from the Pulitzer committee and elsewhere; it has the depth and articulate anguish of the best of modern dramas, and in staging it, director Brian Allen wrought the Good Theater's most powerful show yet. Allen's large and formidable cast of the extended Weston family, led by the incomparable Lisa Stathoplos as the pill-addled matriarch Vi, had a rapport of exceptional cohesion and nuance, and as Vi's eldest daughter and chief antagonist, Kathleen Kimball was arresting and heartbreaking. As Westons variously eviscerated each other, their own myths, and the American promise of progress for over three hours of running time, the Good Theater's remarkable cast carried a dramatic triumph.

    'AUGUST' transports audience to family's disquieting reunion
    The Maine Sunday Telegram by April Boyle, 10/17/2010

    PORTLAND - The temperature here in Maine is getting a bit frigid, but the air is heating up in the Westons' Pawhuska, Okla., home as tempers flare and secrets are revealed.

    The Good Theater kicked off its fall season last week with the New England regional premiere of Tracy Letts' "August: Osage County."

    The Pulitzer Prize-winning play, which also was awarded five Tonys, is an intriguing study of human nature that reveals the dark side of a Midwestern family. And the Good Theater has crafted a scaled-down rendition that drives home the issues with wit, humor and stunning realism.

    "We hope you will enjoy the show and tell your friends about it," artistic director Brian P. Allen told the audience Friday night as he introduced the play.

    "However," he continued with a sly smile, "we ask that you not reveal any of our dirty little secrets and, in turn, we won't reveal any of yours!"

    As Allen hinted, the play is packed with hidden truths and surprises that are unearthed throughout the play, which has a running time of more than three hours and is broken into three acts, with two 10-minute intermissions.

    To accommodate the long running time, Good Theater is starting the evening performances at 7 p.m. and the matinees at 2 p.m. And, despite the length, "August: Osage County" is definitely not a sleeper.

    Expect sparks to fly in this fly-on-the-wall production that allows the audience a voyeuristic view of the soap opera-like reunion of the Weston family.

    In the opening scene, the audience meets the family's Jack Daniel's-guzzling, T.S. Eliot-quoting patriarch, Beverly Weston, played with just the right amount of witty cynicism by Chris Horton. He is interviewing a local American Indian woman, Johnna Monevata (Katherine Davis), for a position as housekeeper and caregiver for his pill-popping wife, Violet Weston (Lisa Stathoplos).

    Stathoplos delivers a must-see, tragicomic performance as the troubled addict. She delivers a convincing performance, complete with disheveled appearance, slowed actions and a disrupted speech pattern.

    When the lights come back up on Scene 2, Beverly has been mysteriously missing for five days, and the Weston family has begun arriving to comfort and watch over his distraught wife.

    As the scenes progress, the audience meets the couple's daughters Ivy (Amy Roche), Barbara (Kathleen Kimball) and Karen (Janice Gardner); Barbara's daughter, Jean (Emma Banks), and her husband, Bill (Mark Rubin); Karen's fiance, Steve Heidebrecht (Paul Drinan); Violet's older sister, Mattie Fae Aiken (Cynthia Barnett), and her husband, Charlie (Charles Michael Howard); the Aikens' son, Little Charles (Brent Askari); and the local sheriff, Deon Gilbeau (David Branch).

    Kimball delivers a standout performance as Barbara, and Barnett and Howard bring color and comic relief as Mattie Fae and Charlie.

    The Broadway production of the play featured elaborate, three-story sets that would never fit into the intimate theater at the St. Lawrence Arts Center. In their place, Stephen Underwood has crafted a three-dimensional set that cleverly gives the illusion of levels.

    And by using a scaled-down set, Good Theater artfully gives even greater focus to the characters in this already character-driven play. The result is an intense dark comedy, packed with unforgettable performances and stimulating wordplay.

    Crushing heartbreak on the American plains
    The Portland Phoenix by Megan Grumbling 10/20/2010

    Osage County, Oklahoma is a hot, landlocked span of plains on the border of Kansas. "Who's the asshole who saw this big, flat nothing and decided to plant his flag here?" wonders middle-aged Barbara as she unwillingly treads the threshold of her childhood home. It's before this stifling and unforgiving Midwestern landscape that Tracy Letts, himself a child of Oklahoma, stages his modern American classic, the darkly comedic drama August: Osage County. The story of an extended family's savage self-destruction, this 2008 winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Drama is a profane and exceptionally funny foray into Middle American generational pathos. Director Brian P. Allen opens Good Theater's season with an impeccably cast and monumentally acted production.

    When patriarch Beverly Weston (Chris Horton), a one-time famous poet and lifelong "professional alcoholic," goes missing, three generations of Westons reunite rancorously under the same roof to tend his wife Vi (Lisa Stathoplos), the family's acid-tongued, pill-addicted matriarch. There in the three stories of the family home, which Vi has sealed against the daylight (and which set designer Stephen Underwood renders evocatively in disembodied windows and walls, à la Our Town), for more than three hours of running time almost no relationship escapes the fray: In strife between sisters, between mothers and daughters, and between wives and husbands, the Westons variously eviscerate each other, their own myths, and the American promise of progress.

    Allen's excellent actors have been preparing for the show together since August, and the long rehearsal period shows in the cast's remarkable cohesion, as well as in the marvelously rich nuances at play in the Weston family's nexus of fraught and secret-ridden relationships. Vi's sister Mattie Fay (Cynthia Barnett) bickers with her husband Charlie (Charles Michael Howard) with the resignation and elisions of long conjugal cross-purposes, and puts down their self-effacing, unemployed son Charlie (Brent Askari) as if in long practice. In contrast, Vi's eldest daughter Barbara (Kathleen Kimball) upbraids both her estranged husband Bill (Mark Rubin) and their teenage daughter Jean (Emma Banks) with the viciousness of the newly wounded. But the uncontested mistress of verbal warfare is Vi, for whose sly and brilliant cruelties everyone else is constantly on the alert.

    Brought together, Vi's three beautifully drawn daughters, Barbara, Ivy (Amy Roche) and Karen (Janice Gardner) are at once fruit from the same tree of wit and insecurities, and at the same time strikingly distinct from one another: Watch Karen's loose-bodied narcissism in her cleavage-revealing funeral dress, gesturing obliviously with dinner-table napkins, in contrast to Barbara, tight-mouthed and high-bodiced, as she goes around furiously re-folding them. Watch all three of them alone together passing a bottle of Jack, wavering between resentment and intimacy, and finally sharing it for a moment in hilarity over how best to refer to their mother's "cooch" (in which she'd once stashed bottle of pills).

    An array of these relationships abrades bracingly throughout the show, but the crowning cataclysm is the funeral dinner of the second act, in which 10 adults are captive, including Karen's schmucky fiancé Steve (Paul Drinan), and even the Native-American housekeeper (Katherine Davis) is present at the "children's table" with Jean. This masterfully directed scene builds in a marvel of turbulent — and often hilarious — inflections, gestures and glances, and when the shit finally hits the fan, both the sting and the ache of the violence are exquisite.

    ‘Osage County’ a powerful drama

    “August: Osage County” at The Good Theater in Portland is a multi-generational drama.
    The Times Record by Scott Andrews, 10/21/2010

    PORTLAND — Soap opera and tragic drama share a common driving force: the sense of perverse fascination with personal self-destruction and social implosion. Like the proverbial fly on the wall, the viewer witnesses and vicariously experiences the nightmarish process from a safe distance.

    One of the most powerful and successful American stage dramas of recent decades harnesses that power, combining elements of both soap opera and Shakespearean tragedy. “August: Osage County” written by Tracy Letts, debuted in Chicago three years ago. The subsequent Broadway production in 2007 won two of the most prestigious honors in stagecraft: The Tony Award for Best Play and the Pulitzer Prize for Drama.

    A darkly comedic drama about the disintegration of a large Midwestern family of three generations, “August: Osage County” is being produced in Maine for the first time by Portland’s Good Theater. Under the direction of Brian P. Allen, this powerful drama is enjoying a wonderful professional (non-Equity) production that runs through Nov. 7.

    I’ve been attending Good Theater since its inception, and “August: Osage County” is definitely the most powerful drama the company has mounted to date. It’s well worth the drive to Portland to see it.

    “August: Osage County” is a large, sprawling play with a cast of 13 and a huge set. The Broadway production recreated a three-story house; Good Theater’s much smaller set, designed by Steve Underwood, spills out of its available space in all dimensions and is capped by three architecture details — two dormers and a gable — that hang high above the stage and provide an almost ethereal quality.

    The interior of the set is constructed on three levels, suggesting different floors of a big old house. The furniture is large and massive, mirroring the house itself and metaphorically reflecting the three generations of family members who quarrel beneath its roof.

    Creating this sense of large size in a physically small space also challenges the lighting designer, who needs to deftly alter colors and intensities. Jamie Grant rises to the challenge and succeeds.

    Although the formal time span between opening curtain and denouement covers only a few weeks during the month of August, the script extensively revisits long-past episodes in the lives of the characters, giving the impression that decades are rolling by. The play’s long running time — three hours and 15 minutes, including two intermissions — also creates the impression of an epic journey.

    Good Theater has assembled a top-notch professional cast. The action mostly revolves around two bitterly opposed characters, an aging woman and her middle-age daughter. They find themselves together for the funeral of the patriarch of the family, who has drowned himself under mysterious circumstances.

    Both of the two principal women characters get bravura performances. Lisa Stathoplos is magnificent portraying the 65-year-old matriarch of the family, a melancholy, razor-tongued woman whose mind is addled by her addiction to a smorgasbord of drugs and tortured by psychological demons. This character represents one of the Himalayan peaks of the stage, and Stathoplos has successfully scaled the summit.

    She’s equaled by Kathleen Kimball as a conflicted daughter who is battling enemies on all sides, futilely struggling to keep her own family together while she simultaneously tries to control her two sisters and her mother’s kith and kin. This character requires reserves of raw emotional energy, and Kimball brings a full tank to Good Theater.

    There are numerous peripheral dramas and criss-crossing relationships. This unhappy family gives new meaning to the adjective “dysfunctional.” One of these side dramas concerns the tension between the matriarch and her sister, played by Cynthia Barnett.

    It is augmented and exacerbated by another sub-drama exploring the sister’s relationship with her husband, played by Charles Michael Howard. Barnett and Howard are both members of Actors Equity, and appear in this professional non-Equity production by special arrangement.

    The language is at times very foul and it’s an emotional roller-coaster. It has much the character of a multi-episode soap opera, as long-hidden secrets are periodically revealed and metaphorical skeletons fall out of closets at regular intervals. There’s also a lot of comedy — acerbic repartee and caustic one-liners — interspersed throughout the play.

    The tone for “August: Osage County” is set in a lengthy first scene — termed a “prologue” by the playwright — which is mostly a monologue by the soon-to-be-dead patriarch of the family, played memorably by Chris Horton.

    He describes himself as a “world class alcoholic” and outlines the sad pharmaceutical history of his wife, who makes a very brief appearance. The prologue concludes with a declamation on the poet T.S. Eliot and the gift of a book of his poetry to his wife’s caretaker, played by Katherine Davis

    The play ends with the lights fading and Davis softly reciting Eliot’s most famous lines: “This is how the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.”

Blueberries, Broadway & Brian

written & performed by Brian P. Allen

November 10 - 21, 2010

From chance meetings with stars like Elizabeth Taylor, Kevin Bacon and Hugh Jackman to working for legendary producer, Victoria Crandall, at Maine State Music Theatre, Brian has a story to tell. His upbeat attitude has allowed him to see the humor in life, and his life has been a riot.

Did I tell you about taking piano lessons at the casket factory? How about the time I lead a tour to London and we ended up in the wrong country? Oh, I've got to tell you about the bats in our belfry. One part play, one part stand-up comedy and all hilarious.

  • Written & performed by Brian P. Allen^


    Lighting - Jamie Grant
    Stage Manager - Justin Cote

    * Member Actors' Equity Association
    ^ Member SDC, Society of Directors & Choreographers

  • Amusing show reveals the life of Brian, theater's executive and artistic director
    The Maine Sunday Telegram by April Boyle, 11/14/2010

    What do the words "blueberries," "Broadway" and "Brian" have in common? you ask. No, they're not the opening pages of the "Berenstains' B Book."

    But, they are the cornerstones for a story with wacky events that could easily have come from the minds of Stan and Jan Berenstain or, better yet, Dr. Seuss.

    Good Theater's latest offering isn't a children's tale, though. And, for Brian P. Allen, life is definitely crazier than fiction. "Blueberries, Broadway & Brian" is a revealing tell-all about Allen's 51-year journey from "blueberry queen" to executive and artistic director of the Good Theater.

    Allen's charming walk down memory lane opens with a series of old photographs, projected on a screen on stage. Oohs, aahs and laughter filled the room Friday night as various images flashed of Allen as a smiling baby, a child in horned-rimmed glasses, a young boy playing in a kiddie pool with his younger sister and finally stopping on a picture of Allen as a young man that made him blush as he walked out onto the stage.

    "It's only life -- you can't get it wrong," Allen told the audience at the close of the show. And, this perhaps best explains how a Maine boy, who was born to a family of blueberry mongers, could grow up to tour nationally, do shows off-Broadway, star in a reality television show, co-found a theater and hobnob with celebrities.

    Allen's family owns and operate Allen's Blueberries, currently headquartered in Ellsworth. At age 8, Allen began raking blueberries and became second in charge at age 16. Blueberries were his life and a career in theater seemed unlikely for a boy born in Ellsworth and growing up in Union.

    As Allen tells it, though, the theater bug first bit him when he starred as Sunny Bunny at age 7 in "Sunny Bunny's First Easter." Theater has been his true passion ever since.

    "Blueberries, Broadway & Brian" is packed with tales of colorful characters and amusing adventures and misadventures from Allen's life. There are stories from his youth about taking piano lessons at a casket factory; bats in the belfry of his family's Adams family-esque home; and loving reminisces about his sister, his parents -- whom he refers to as the Stiller and Meara of Union -- his grandmother and his grandfather, who is still alive at age 96.

    There are also plenty of zany tales about Allen's eight years working with Victoria Crandall at what is now known as Maine State Music Theatre and fun anecdotes about crossing paths with such stars as Susan Sarandon, Elizabeth Taylor and Kevin Bacon.

    In "Carol Burnett Show" fashion, Allen wraps up the evening with questions from the audience that showcases his ability to think on his feet.

    "I'm having a blast at 51," Allen says in his news release. "I get to do exactly what I want to do, exactly where I want to do it. So many people in the arts don't get to say that. I'm a lucky guy who can usually find the humor in most things and 'Blueberries, Broadway & Brian' is all about the humor.

    The show lasts approximately an hour and half, and Allen's fascinating life story is sure to bring a smile to your face.

    'Blueberries, Broadway & Brian'
    The Times Record by Scott Andrews, 11/15/2010

    Brian Allen, a fixture of Maine theater for three decades, spins stories about his experiences in a very funny, engaging, highly personal show at the St. Lawrence Arts Center in Portland.

    Brian P. Allen, co-founder and artistic director of Portland’s Good Theater, has loved the stage all his life. His first public performance was in the title role of “Sonny Bunny” in a grade school production, and after college he became the business manager of Maine State Music Theatre.

    He’s had many theatrical experiences since then, including a national tour of an off-Broadway show he co-created.

    His latest stage incarnation is a very funny, very engaging biographical retrospective that recounts his life and times, starting with the family blueberry business in Union up to the present. Along the way he’s met some interesting characters and had some fascinating experiences.

    “Blueberries, Broadway & Brian” is divided roughly 50-50 between stand-up comedy and one-man play. It’s full of laughs and offers wonderful insights into characters such as the late Vickie Crandall, MSMT founder and longtime artistic director.

    I saw it this past weekend and highly recommend the show to anyone interested in theater, especially its behind-the-scenes workings.

Broadway at Good Theater

Annual Fundraiser Concert

December 2 - 5, 2010

The annual concert for Good Theater is a ‘not-to-be-missed’ event. A Broadway star is joined by special guests and a dozen of your Good Theater favorites. The concert features Broadway hits and holiday favorites accompanied by a three-piece band. This show has quickly become a holiday tradition and last year all five performances sold out. Join us for this very special holiday tradition.

  • Featured Guest - Sean Palmer
    Marva Pittman
    Kelly Caufield
    Lynne McGhee
    Jennifer McLeod
    Marie Dittmer
    Deirdre Fulton
    David Goulet
    Grace Bradford
    Stephen Underwood


    Musical Director - Victoria Stubbs
    Bass/Guitar - John Lawson
    Drums - Bill Manning


    Stage Manager/Set Design - Justin Cote

  • Holiday fundraiser showcases talent
    The Portland Press Herald by April Boyle, 12/6/2010

    The Good Theater is once again offering a respite from the hustle and bustle of everyday life with a show that’s reminiscent of an old-time holiday television special. 

    The theater’s eighth annual holiday fundraising event is hosted by artistic director Brian P. Allen and offers patrons the opportunity to see performances by a wonderful array of talent. 

    This year’s show features Broadway star Sean Palmer, who has an impressive resume of stage and screen credits. He recently played Prince Eric in “The Little Mermaid,” while “Sex and the City” fans will recognize the handsome actor from his recurring role as Stanford Blatch’s boyfriend, Marcus.

    Special guests Grace Bradford, Kelly Caufield, Marie Dittmer, Deirdre Fulton, David Goulet, Lynne McGhee, Jennifer McLeod, Stephen Underwood and Marva Pittman join Palmer on vocals and Victoria Stubbs (keyboards), John Lawson (bass/guitar) and Bill Manning (percussion) provide musical accompaniment.

    Pittman got the holiday spirit flowing Friday with an opening performance of “Christmas Time is Here.” 

    Her soulful voice enveloped the audience with heartwarming images of snowflakes, sleigh bells, carols and yuletide by the fireside. Pittman, a returning favorite from North Carolina, had several family members in the audience, making her performance all the more endearing.

    She graced the stage again later in the show with a jazzy rendition of “What Child is This” and a last-minute addition of an a cappella duet with Caufield on “Silent Night” that was mesmerizing, with heavenly harmonies. The audience couldn’t have asked for two more angelic voices.

    Palmer took the stage after Pittman with Joni Mitchell’s ballad “The River” and returned with the hymn, “In the Bleak Midwinter.” His gorgeous tenor vocals captivated the audience, heartbreaking longing hanging in the air.

    The 15-song set flowed, with moving renditions of “The Christmas Song” (McLeod), “Sweet Little Jesus Boy” (Goulet) and “Grown-up Christmas List” (Dittmer), interspersed with such lighthearted songs as “Rockin’ Around the Christmas Tree” (Fulton) and “What Are you Doing on New Year’s Eve?” (Caufield with Lawson on acoustic guitar).

    Caufield delivered a stunning, show-stopping rendition of “Ave Maria,” and the audience couldn’t stop laughing at Goulet’s humorous performance of “The Twelve Days After Christmas,” which outrageously tells what happened to the gifts from the “Twelve Days of Christmas” after a fight with his true love.

    The first half of evening wound to a close with McGhee leading the audience in a singalong of “White Christmas.” And, magically, big fluffy snowflakes softly fell from the night sky during intermission.

    The company returned to deliver an 18-song set titled “Music of Broadway and Beyond.” Underwood opened, serenading Allen with “Broadway Baby” from “Follies.” The number showcased Underwood’s many talents, and his interaction with Allen was a real treat.

    Palmer delighted the audience with memorable renditions of “Beautiful, Beautiful World” (“The Apple Tree”) and “Her Voice” (“The Little Mermaid”) from his repertoire and an emotion-packed performance of “No Trouble” from “A Christmas Carol – the Concert.”

    Pittman brought down the house with a powerful rendition of Simon and Garfunkel’s “Bridge Over Troubled Water,” and Goulet again showed off his stylistic range with the soulful “Ol’ Man River” (“Show Boat”) and the entertaining “Easier to Love” (“Baby”).

    The beautiful set also included such songs as Fulton’s sassy “Cabaret” (“Cabaret”), Goulet and Bradford’s adorable duet of “I Don’t Need Anything But You” (“Annie”) and the emotional “Make Them Hear You” (“Ragtime”), performed by Caufield.

    “Broadway at Good Theater” is an enchanting two-hour escape that warms the heart and soul with song and dance. It’s sure to get you in the holiday spirit.

Moonlight and Magnolias

by Ron Hutchinson

February 3 - 27, 2011
Maine Premiere

It is 1939 and Hollywood is abuzz. Legendary producer David O. Selznick has shut down production on his new epic, Gone With the Wind. He has locked Victor Fleming the director and Ben Hecht the screenwriter in his office. Together they have five days to complete a new shooting script. The problem is that Hecht hasn’t read the novel, so Selznick and Fleming must enact the entire story!

  • David Selznick - Stephen Underwood
    Victor Fleming - Tony Reilly
    Ben Hecht - Brent Askari
    Miss Poppenghul - Lynne McGhee*


    Director - Brian P. Allen^
    Lighting Design - Jamie Grant
    Stage Manager - Justin Cote
    Assistant Stage Manager - Heidi Therrien
    Tech Director - Stephen Underwood
    Asst Tech Director - Craig Robinson
    Costumes/Stage Manager - Justin Cote
    Set Design/Assistant Tech Director/Photography - Craig Robinson
    Sound Design - Stephen Underwood

    * Member Actors' Equity Association
    ^ Member SDC, Society of Directors & Choreographers

  • 'Moonlight and Magnolias' long on laughs
    Portland Press Herald By Steve Feeney 2/4/2011

    If you like classic movies and the more positive Hollywood folklore surrounding the making of classic movies, the current comedic offering from Good Theater is made for you. It may get a little silly at times, but most audience members will find it hard to resist the play's good-natured charm.

    "Moonlight and Magnolias," Ron Hutchinson's 2004 play, concerns the final, desperate days in the rewriting of the script for "Gone With the Wind," the 1939 film that gave the world its first cinematic mega-hit.

    Based on real characters and some actual events, "Moonlight" gives a fictional account of what happened when the acclaimed producer David O. Selznick decided that he had to call in a new writer and director after filming had already begun.

    Ben Hecht and Victor Fleming, after much pleading and cajoling from Selznick, reluctantly agreed to take on the task.

    The action happens entirely in Selznick's office, where the three spend a harried five days and nights, dining only on peanuts and bananas (for energy, Selznick maintains). They hilariously deride and belittle each other's talents and motivations while coming up with a script.

    The comedy is all over the place, from showbiz insider wisecracks to near Three Stooges-level physical comedy. The three principal actors, directed by Brian P. Allen, threw themselves wholeheartedly into Friday's opening performance.

    The lanky Stephen Underwood, as Selznick, was at the center of the creative storm as he incessantly reminded the others of the pleasures of success and the consequences of failure. Some of his funniest moments came when he and Tony Reilly, as director Fleming, acted out scenes from the book for the benefit of writer Hecht, played by Brent Askari.

    Reilly reached near-absurd levels of physicality as he suffered the indignities of the film's characters and director.

    Askari, known for a series of caustic characters he has portrayed, had a good time with his Hecht, who believes that films should carry serious messages about "real people," those who suffer discrimination despite their contributions to society.

    Lynne McGhee completed the cast as Selznick's put-upon secretary, Miss Poppenghul.

    As Selznick says of audiences near the end of the two-hour play, "You have to give them what they want, not what's good for them."

    This relatively light but very entertaining production goes most unashamedly for the laughs. If you want some of those, see the show. It might even be good for you.

Bedroom Farce

by Alan Ayckbourn

March 10 - April 3, 2011

Bedroom Farce shines a spotlight on the trials and tribulations of suburban marriage, revolves around four couples, three bedrooms, two celebrations, one blazing row and an illicit kiss (or two). Trevor and Susannah have a problem relationship that requires urgent attention. What better solution than to talk it over with family and friends? Preferably in their respective bedrooms and ideally in the middle of the night. Inevitably, one problem relationship tends to spark off another. When you have friends like Trevor and Susannah, nobody gets much sleep.

  • Ernest - Bob McCormack
    Deliah - Cathy Counts
    Jan - Janice Gardner
    Nick - Mark Rubin
    Trevor - William McDonough, III
    Susannah - Deirdre Fulton
    Malcolm - Erik Moody
    Kate - Meredith Lamothe


    Director - Brian P. Allen^
    Set Design - Janet Montgomery
    Costumes/Stage Manager - Justin Cote
    Tech Director - Stephen Underwood
    Asst Tech Director - Craig Robinson
    Poster Graphic image - FantasyStock
    Lighting Design - Iain Odlin
    Assistant Tech Director/Photography - Craig Robinson
    Assistant Stage Manager - Heidi Therrien

    * Member Actors' Equity Association
    ^ Member SDC, Society of Directors & Choreographers

  • Theater Review: 'Bedroom Farce' will give you the giggles
    Maine Sunday Telegram by APRIL BOYLE, 3/13/2011

    With the promise of spring just around the corner, it's time to bid a fond farewell to another winter theater season. The Good Theater is closing out its 9th season with a journey back to 1970s England, where four couples and three bedrooms add up to a rollicking evening of lighthearted laughs.

    "Bedroom Farce" was written by British playwright Alan Ayckbourn in 1975 and had its West End debut at the Prince of Wales Theatre in 1978. It went on to have a successful 276-performance run on Broadway in 1979.

    Costume designer Justin Cote and set designer Janet Montgomery have superbly captured the look and feel of the 1970s, in all its tacky glory. Cote must have scoured the vintage shops and second-hand stores to outfit the cast in so much polyester and paisley. And the hairdos are a definite blast to the past.

    Montgomery was given the seemingly impossible task of fitting three bedrooms on the Good Theater's intimate stage. She has succeeded with artistic flair, highlighting the distinctive personalities of each couple.

    As the play's title indicates, the production is a farce, filled with absurd situations and plenty of door-slamming fun. The audience gets to voyeuristically witness the behind-closed-doors lives of three couples in their bedrooms, all the while observing the amusing unraveling of the relationship of a fourth couple, who is intertwined in the lives of the other three.

    The bedroom to the audience's right belongs to Ernest (Bob McCormack) and Delia (Cathy Counts), who are celebrating their anniversary. They are a proper British couple in their golden years, whose idea of being "wicked" is having sardines on toast in bed. They are the parents of Trevor (William McDonough III), whose relationship with his wife, Susannah (Deirdre Fulton), is on the rocks.

    To the far left, is the bedroom of Trevor's ex-girlfriend Jan (Janice Gardner) and her husband, Nick (Mark Rubin). Nick is currently laid up in bed with a pulled back muscle.

    In the middle, literally and metaphorically, are Kate (Meredith Lamothe) and Malcolm (Erik Moody). The newlyweds have recently moved into a fixer-upper and are throwing a house-warming party. They have invited all their friends, including Jan, Trevor and Susannah.

    Madness and mayhem ensue, as Trevor and Susannah's relationship erupts publicly, throwing a monkey wrench into the lives of the other three couples. It's nonstop action that requires precise timing and execution to garner the laughs. And, the Good Theater's cast is an absolute comic delight to watch.

    Rubin's character provides an ongoing gag for the production, with the lights periodically coming up on his side of the stage to reveal him and Gardner in compromising situations due to Nick's back pain. McCormack and Counts serve as comic anchors, with a wonderful array of comic lines, delivered with perfectly deadpan wryness. Lamothe and Moody are comic whirlwinds that infuse the production with vitality. And McDonough and Fulton are an absolute riot in their neurotic roles.

    "Bedroom Farce" is well-executed silliness that's sure to bring a smile with its outrageous situations.

    Don't be surprised if you see a bit of yourself, or your partner, in the play's thoroughly entertaining, quirky characters.

    ‘Bedroom Farce’... top choice
    The Forecaster, by Scott Andrews, 3/14/2011

    "Bedroom Farce," an exceptionally funny comedy by Alan Ayckbourn, is the current offering at Good Theater in Portland.

    Theater dominates the top of the arts and entertainment offerings as the mid-point of March passes and the calendar inexorably marches toward spring. Two professional theatrical productions are highly recommended.

    First is “Bedroom Farce,” a comic masterpiece by Alan Ayckbourn, a British comic playwright who has penned more than 70 laughers for the stage. Good Theater’s current production, which opened last weekend in Portland, is good for loads of laughs.

    In this country, Alan Ayckbourn is often referred to as “the British Neil Simon,” an exceptionally clever playwright whose work is characterized by deft plots and incisive comic wit. But across the Atlantic, Neil Simon might be referred to as the American Alan Ayckbourn.

    With more than 70 plays to his credit, Ayckbourn is Britain’s most successful modern comic playwright. Good Theater is currently producing one of Ayckbourn’s best.

    “Bedroom Farce” revolves around four couples and three bedrooms. It’s not exactly a traditional slamming-door affair, but it’s wildly funny and the playwright’s insights into relationships are more sophisticated than might be expected in a more traditional farce.

    Tops among the cast are the oldest of the four couples. The interplay between Ernest and Delia (Bob McCormack and Cathy Counts) is simply delicious. McCormack’s portrayal of a phlegmatic middle-aged, upper middle-class patrician draws the loudest laughs, and Counts provides the perfect comic foil.

    Other kudos have been earned by director Brian P. Allen, for keeping the action moving at a hectic pace, and Janet Montgomery, for managing to fit three bedrooms on a such a small stage.