Signature Shorts Shorts 4 Kids UnderShorts

'Summer Shorts' theater long on excitement

BY CHRISTINE DOLEN
cdolen@miamiherald.com

Published: Mon Jun 02, 2008




GEORGE SCHIAVONE/FOR THE MIAMI HERALD

'On Story' takes place in the writers' room of a television sitcom.

Though it happens only once a year, for a month at the start of each summer, City Theatre's Summer Shorts Festival is on any true South Florida arts aficionado's short list of must-see theater.

Entertaining, sometimes enlightening and generally just plain fun, this year's festival serves up 16 short comedies and dramas in two programs dubbed Signature Shorts. Next week, the five plays in City Theatre's Shorts 4 Kids festival and eight edgy works in the late-night Undershorts program join the mix in the Carnival Studio Theater at Miami's Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts, taking the company's penchant for multitasking to a challenging new extreme.

The news coming out of Signature Shorts, a few nitpicks aside, is overwhelmingly positive. Under new artistic director Stuart Meltzer, the 13-year-old festival is consistently good, and some of the pieces are riotously funny, deeply disturbing or undeniably touching. In a typical Shorts festival, a few plays leave you wondering what those who picked something that weird/flawed could have been thinking. Nothing in Signature Shorts bottoms out so completely, a tribute to the play choices, the company and the work of Meltzer and fellow directors Michael Montel, Margaret Ledford, Rafael de Acha, Amy London, Stephanie Norman, Kim St. Leon and Clive Cholerton.

Meltzer has said that he chose this summer's nine actors even before settling on the plays. Smart move.

Though notably short on diversity, the company features some of the region's best performers, including Carbonell Award winners Laura Turnbull, Antonio Amadeo, Terry Hardcastle, Paul Tei and Kim Ostrenko. Stephen Trovillion, who has been part of Summer Shorts nearly every year since it began, again demonstrates why watching his richly detailed work is, for his many fans, the reason they go to the festival. Elena Garcia, one of the best improv performers around, is to-die-for funny. And Lindsey Forgey (a recent New World School of the Arts college grad) and Nick Duckhardt (still at New World) bring their fresh talent into the mix.

Perhaps Meltzer's best decision, in addition to bringing Trovillion back from his teaching gig in Wisconsin, was hiring Turnbull. Her range in Program A (the stronger of the two eight-play presentations) is dazzling.

In Henry Meyerson's Silence, a deeply moving piece about elderly Holocaust survivors trying to make sense of the too-early death of their beloved only son, Turnbull and Trovillion are both fierce and heartbreaking; later, as quite a different couple in Martin Russell's Eros Is Sore Spelled Backwards, they're saucy, playful and a tad insecure. In Edwin Sanchez's monologue Jody's Mother, Turnbull expertly navigates a shamed mother's heartbreak, love and despair. And in Michael McKeever's inspired-by-fact Laura Keene Goes On, Turnbull brings both a period feeling and a comedically burnished ego the size of her huge hoop skirt to the role of the actress-manager miffed that her celebratory 1,000th performance in Our American Cousin has been halted by the shooting of Abraham Lincoln.

In addition to his anguished performance in Silence, Trovillion does brilliant work opposite Duckhardt in John Yearley's My Father's Heart, about a businessman whose deeply dysfunctional teen son has made him loathe both the boy and himself. Classic Trovillion -- sly, arch, full of perfectly pitched attitude -- is on display in Paul Rudnick's Sheepish, a magazine piece (about an openly gay sheep) that Trovillion (with an assist from costume designer Ellis Tillman) helps turn into a comic gem.

Other memorable moments from this year's SignatureShorts: Amadeo playing a mime with an ulterior motive in Michael Lew's In Paris, You Will Find Many Baguettes But Only One True Love; as the loving narrator of Silence; as a nervous, besotted new dad in Erik Gernand's It's a Girl; as a sitcom writer who won't let go in Bill Wrubel's On Story.

Garcia and Tei do a dance of the dysfunctional (with strange and sometimes offensive puppets!) in M. Thomas Cooper's Tongue Tied, a strange piece that the two somehow pull off. Tei, though underutilized in Signature Shorts, has a classic take-no-prisoners rant in Carlos Murillo's odd Fragment of a Paper Airplane.

Hardcastle and Ostrenko are strangers coping with their offsprings' critters in Susan Westfall's Rats (which features Duckhardt as a punked-out pet shop clerk and an ending that leaps too abruptly into tragedy). In Program B, the two become spouses at war in David Mamet's Home, a Shorts detour into nastiness similar to the one Forgey and Duckhardt take in Don Salvo's Unraveled. Hardcastle and Garcia make Ellen Margolis' A Little Chatter, about two couldn't-be-more-different parents at a Little League game, unexpectedly touching.

Part of the Summer Shorts experience, for diehards anyway, is doing the Saturday or Sunday mini-marathon -- seeing Program A (about 90 minutes of theater), having the on-site meal, then seeing Program B (another 90 minutes or so). The Asian-themed food, a culinary riff on Jeff Quinn's set and lighting design, is very good.

And so, overall, is Signature Shorts.

Christine Dolen is The Miami Herald's theater critic.
 


CITY THEATRE'S SUMMER SHORTS FESTIVAL IS MADE POSSIBLE THROUGH GENEROUS SUPPORT OF OUR SPONSORS:
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