The Phoenix Network:
 
 
 
About  |  Advertise
Adult  |  Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures
 

Natural style

The Theater Project's fab Steel Magnolias
By MEGAN GRUMBLING  |  May 7, 2008
insidetheater_steelmagnolia
TOUCHING IT UP A BIT: With ease and grace.

The Louisiana salon run by Truvy (Wendy Poole) is packed with the stuff of 1980s comfort and beauty: Tab, trolls, and a whole slew of blow dryers. But more than a hair salon, her bright little shop is a hub in the emotional lives of six strong women, in Robert Harling’s much-produced tear-jerker Steel Magnolias. Christopher Price directs a crackerjack cast in a production at the Theater Project.

Over the course of a little more than two years, we track the women’s evolving lives, attitudes, and hair-dos: When we first meet Shelby (Elizabeth Chambers), she’s about to be married; she and her mom M’Lynn (Heather Weafer) talk out the jitters as they get primped by Truvy and her quirky new employee Annelle (Reba Short). About a generation above M’Lynn are the former mayor’s widow Clairee (Kate O’Neill) and the crabby, rich Ouiser (Michele Livermore Wigton), whose name is pronounced “Wheezer.” Together, the inter-generational friends talk their way through women’s perspectives on marriage, empty-nest syndrome, golden-years dating, pregnancy, spousal abandonment, religious conversion, and death — all the while being trimmed, teased, and polished.

Yes, it’s fair to call the script chick-lit for the stage, especially as tragedy works its way in. But in the hands of Price’s virtuoso cast, it’s more immediately an entertaining series of entwined regional character studies, rife with repartee. A quick scan of the cast list is enough to suggest the vitality, intelligence, and hilarity of this production. Chambers, Short, Poole, Weafer, and Wigton have a mighty rapport, won over numerous Theater Project shows together; and O’Neill, who’s acted with Portland Stage and Portland Players, has gracefully become part of the gang. This show’s small-town Louisiana kith and kin are savvy and tart, beautifully convey the passage of time, and never overstate the women’s emotions.

Steel Magnolias by Robert Harling | Directed by Christopher Price | Produced by The Theater Project, in Brunswick | through May 18 | 207.729.8584
Weafer and Chambers have a great mother-daughter riff, at once teasing and exasperated (Shelby’s Blush and Bashful wedding colors look like Pepto-Bismol to M’Lynne) and deeply affectionate, with much communicated in gazes. O’Neill's Clairee has a nice balance of rarefied and provincial, and Wigton is — as always — a delight in the curmudgeonly character role of Ouiser. Short gives the abruptly born-again stylist Annelle both ingénue qualities and convincingly wacky ones (I particularly love her enthusiasm for her Christmas tree decorations — “white lights, Jesuses, and spoolies!”). And Poole’s Truvy, whose cozy business holds everybody together, is both sassy and nurturing. She and Short also get props for having either consulted with a real beautician or possessing some natural styling abilities, because much of their stage time is spent doing graceful and intricate things to wigs with scissors, curlers, and picks.

Price’s set is absolute eye-candy, and he sure didn’t scrimp on the hair product, curling irons, dryers, and even combs and brushes in that weird blue sterilizing fluid. He’s also rigged up a real shampooing sink, with water, and one of those dryers that your whole head goes into. Such luxury! JP Gagnon, on lights, does characteristically lush work: Outside Truvy’s salon, the blue of the world is in Technicolor.

1  |  2  |   next >
Related: Comic thunder, Talk to the animal, The mouths of babes, More more >
  Topics: Theater , Culture and Lifestyle, Food and Cooking, Recipes,  More more >
| More

[ 05/21 ]   Albert Castiglia  @ Time Out Pub
[ 05/21 ]   "2012 BFA Thesis Exhibition," mixed media student exhibition  @ Maine College of Art
ARTICLES BY MEGAN GRUMBLING
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   A CAUTIONARY TALE FROM 18TH-CENTURY FRANCE  |  May 16, 2012
    Though there's no hard evidence that Marie Antoinette actually uttered "Let them eat cake," she remains a larger-than-life symbol of ruling-class decadence and a culture of gaping wealth disparity.
  •   PLAY: BEWARE WHAT LIES BENEATH  |  May 09, 2012
    The US Bureau of Land Management estimates that 90 percent of existing natural-gas wells in this country use hydraulic fracturing techniques — commonly known as "fracking" — that inject pressurized water and toxic chemicals into the ground.
  •   CIRCLE MIRROR TRANSCENDS THEATER  |  May 09, 2012
    "Are we going to do any real acting?" complains the one teenager enrolled in a small Vermont community center's drama class.
  •   THE ORIGINALS EXPLORE THE SOUL OF AMERICA  |  May 02, 2012
    "I savor the boundlessness of it all," exalts life-loving Macon (Sally Wood) to timid Bess (Jennifer Porter), under the vertiginously open sky of 1860s Wyoming Territory.
  •   ACORN PERFORMS TEN PLAYS BY MAINE WRITERS  |  April 27, 2012
    This year, the ten short plays of Acorn Productions' 11th Annual Maine Playwrights Festival, chosen from more than 50 submitted to this year's open call, tends toward the dark: it includes specters of AIDS, the economic downturn, child abuse, and death by wild animals.

 See all articles by: MEGAN GRUMBLING



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2012 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group