Archives > Entertainment

Print this story | Email this story | Comment (No comments posted.) | Rate | Text Size

The 'Royal' Treatment


Grand dame Fanny Cavendish (Marian Seldes) holds court and a dog. Photo by Craig Schwartz.

Ahmanson's Pleasant Valentine to Charming, Neurotic Acting Dynasties

by Rob Kendt
Published: Friday, April 9, 2004 4:17 PM PDT
They don't make nostalgia like they used to, and maybe that's just as well.

Case in point: George S. Kaufman and Edna Ferber's star-struck 1927 ode to the lure of the greasepaint, The Royal Family. While audiences of the time clearly understood it to be based on the storied Drew/Barrymore acting dynasty, then still preeminent on the American stage, it is hard to imagine this funny, sticky valentine - now in a pleasant if trifling revival at the Ahmanson Theatre - ever playing with the immediacy of the present tense.

However it appeared at the time, the play's romanticized view of stage artists seems, today, rather like an exercise in self-congratulation, though at this distance it's hard to know precisely for what. With its broad, loving strokes and its impromptu stump speeches about the theatrical calling, The Royal Family often plays like a backstage bedtime story, to be read aloud to Broadway babies as they drift off to dreams of endless applause and bundles of bouquets.

In the absence of our firsthand knowledge of stage royalty - we no longer have any in this country, if we ever truly did - the show's self-reflecting glow settles on the troupers who fill the roles in the current production, which is why it takes a certain serendipity in casting for it to be worth mounting at all.


By that standard, director Tom Moore's production is a success, starting at the top with Marian Seldes as Fanny Cavendish, the family's elder stateswoman, who graciously dotes on her progeny's careers while quietly pining for her own return to the stage after a long illness. Seldes is a serenely queenly presence with a crown of gray tresses and angular features that suggest a Hirschfeld drawing come to life, and colored by Erté: She's dressed by costumer Robert Blackman in a series of flowing, silky ensembles that evoke Egyptian pajamas.

As her fiery daughter Julie, at the peak of her career but having mid-life doubts about the "real" life the stage has kept her from, Kate Mulgrew is well cast but not content to rest on that. With a raspy voice that manages to crack in a variety of registers and lock jawed diction so thick it almost becomes a speech impediment, Mulgrew gives an antic, mercurial performance that only settles into its own at the end of Act Two.

It is here that Julie finally loses it and delivers a comic aria of recrimination, verging on mad, that draws the show's main conflict in thick lines: Between the mayhem of a theatrical household that's always "on" and an existence defined by domesticity, between the Cavendishes' unruly dynasty and a more typical version of family values, Julie cries out for the imagined comforts of security, dignity, modesty - though, naturally, with a protest-too-much vigor that belies her words.

This scene highlights one of Moore's more knowing running gags, that these playhouse creatures are never more over-the-top dramatic than when they're renouncing the actor's life. Whether it's the torrentially capricious Tony, a spoiled, swashbuckling cad modeled on John Barrymore, and played with winning, winking savoir faire by Daniel Gerroll; or their harrumphing manager, Oscar (George S. Irving), who gives the evening's signature pep talks amid his kvelling about the vagaries of show business; or the reluctant new ingénue, Julie's daughter Gwen (Melinda Page Hamilton), who just can't imagine she'll ever tire of her stockbroker fiance, Perry (Robert L. Devaney).

There's a faint feminist strain here, courtesy of co-writer Ferber. An elegiac scene with the three generations of Cavendish women, with Fanny offering a sort of sense-memory demonstration of her pre-show rituals, is practically a having-it-all primer; though in this rosy backstage view, in which no serious dysfunction, avarice, jealousy, or economic worry intrudes, there seems precious little at stake in the choice of career vs. family.

This sort of fantasy can be irresistible, even empowering, for creative types, which is one reason why reviving this play, particularly in Los Angeles, is a swell enough idea, and why this new production deserves to be a modest local hit.


It doesn't hurt, of course, that the production is also matter-of-factly sumptuous: Douglas W. Schmidt's capacious two-story set, with its curving staircase and high-flying curtains, gives the place an affectionately homegrown staginess.

Mention must be made of a quintet of scruffy scene stealers - five well-behaved dogs, trained by William Berloni, whose entrances, exits and reassuring presence through a number of scenes are among the show's clearest signals of the way domestic harmony can prevail among even the most motley menagerie.

The Royal Family runs through May 16 at the Ahmanson Theatre, 135 N. Grand Ave., (213) 628-2772 or taperahmanson.com.

page 16, 4/12/04
© Los Angeles Downtown News. Reprinting items retrieved from the archives are for personal use only. They may not be reproduced or retransmitted without permission of the Los Angeles Downtown News. If you would like to re-distribute anything from the Los Angeles Downtown News Archives, please call our permissions department at (213) 481-1448.



  Next
  The Original Couch Potatoes

Article Rating

Current Rating: 0 of 0 votes!Rate File:

Reader Comments

The following are comments from the readers. In no way do they represent the view of ladowntownnews.com.
You must register with a valid email to post comments. Only your Member ID will be posted with the comments.

Registered users sign in here:

Become a Registered User

*Member ID:
*Password:
Remember login?
(requires cookies)
  Forgot Your Password?
 

Do not use usernames or passwords from your financial accounts!

Note: Fields marked with an asterisk (*) are required!

*Create a Member ID:
*Choose a password:
*Re-enter password:
*E-mail Address:
*Year of Birth:
 

(children under 13 cannot register)

*First Name:
*Last Name:
Zip Code:
Optional Information: (your name will be entered in a random quarterly drawing to win a gift certificate for $100 to a Downtown restaurant)
Zip Code of workplace:
Are you a student?: Yes No
Do you read the print edition of Downtown News?: Yes No
Gender: Male Female
Ethnicity:
Total Household Income:
 
Return to: Entertainment « | Home « | Top of Page ^
 
This Week's Issue

Today's Weather
Los Angeles, CA



 

More Enhanced Listings >>