Strictly Platonic: You're Going to Love It
The working process of the creative mind is often a mystery.
There have been volumes dedicated to revealing the secrets of it. On February
20 in Ambler, a chosen group of us got to see inside the creative process of
Larry McKenna, local actor, teacher and playwright. Mr. McKenna is known for his very successful comedy, BURT
AND ME, which ran recently at the Society Hill Playhouse and is having its
Equity debut in Mt. Gretna, Pa.
this summer. I hope to be reviewing that for Stage.
Mr. McKenna treated us to the first public exposure of his
work in progress, STRICTLY PLATONIC, a play, as the title implies, dealing with
relationships. It does so by presenting us with the development of one
relationship in particular. We start with the man we all love to hate these
days: the male chauvinist. Sympathetically portrayed, this ex-jock is 15 years
out of high school. We watch him, through eyes glazed with tears of laughter
sparked by the sheer weight of wit of this play, trot along as his complacent,
clichéd self until he is blind-sided by love in a fashion more literal than you
will understand until you see the play.
Not blocked out on stage, the four actors needed for this
tight, fast-paced piece sat on tall chairs arrayed across the set of Act II
Playhouse’s current show, TIME STANDS STILL. The performers moved instinctively
to indicate the overall motion of a scene but had nothing set in advance. Had I
not spoken with one performer after the show I’d never have known they’d only
read through the script twice before the event, the second time just shortly
before the reading.
The actors were talented to say the least. But it was the
strong, clear writing which permitted such well-timed and effective recital on
such short preparation. This is the funniest play I’ve heard in a long, long. .
.ever. It is a bracing deluge of comedy. Brilliant concept humor, gallant word
play, one line poppers, the deep, effervescent intelligence of the comedy does
not stop.
This play is also an example of why theatre is the most
fully human art. As exemplified by this raucously engaging evening, the only
ingredient necessary to create brilliant theatre is human beings. And, when in
full array, theatre combines and orchestrates all other arts to accomplish its deliveries.
It is all arts in one and yet the simplest to create.
In glimpsing Mr. McKenna’s working process, we see he is
artist and craftsman. Secure in his talent and practical in his approach, a
number of us were invited to the reading with an eye toward providing feedback
Mr. McKenna desires in order to polish the play. The audience received five
questions, and I hope he received responses from all of us. I know he got one
from me. I liked the play so much I had the questions answered before I got
them. My hope is he will find them useful and that some day I will find out
how.
This is the kind of play live theatre needs now. Chokingly
entertaining, it is the sort of play I’d recommend to attract the patronage of
folks who’ve never considered setting foot in a live theatre venue before. It
is not yet published, but watch for it. If you find it playing near you, see
it. If you are a theatre company, perform it. It’s what we need.
My reviews are written for STAGE Magazine, The Delaware Valley's longest-running resource for every level of theatre.
I shared feedback with Larry too. I enjoyed it as much as you did. Larry is a talented and funny guy. Nice summary.
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