Noises Off
Micheal
Frayne
It is only hours before the opening of a British adult farce,
Nothing On, and the touring company is hurriedly running through a final dress
rehearsal in the Grand Theatre, Weston-SuperMare, before the first audience
arrives.
During the first act, we are an audience to this
production of a play within a play.
The Nothing On cast is loveable, but
mainly inept; however, we cheer for them under our breath and hope that they
can pull it together and get the show on the road.
Dotty, the actor playing
Mrs. Clackett, cant remember her entrances and exits.
Garry, the male
love interest, cant remember his lines.
And Brooke, playing Vicki,
the female lead, is constantly posing and primping, without any understanding
of what the play is about or what she is doing.
Trying to pull this all
together into some semblance of a presentable show is the director, Lloyd
Dallas, who is sitting in the darkened auditorium shouting out directions and
trying to get everybody ready for opening.
For the second act, we, the
audience, are sitting backstage; the entire set has been turned 180 degrees.
We can hear the actors performing out front, but what we see is the back
side of the scenery flats, the stage manager trying to keep the action flowing
and everybody happy, and the various antics of the actors offstage between
their exits and entrances.
The play has been on the road for one month now,
and relationships between cast members, as well as the quality of Nothing On
have deteriorated.
Garry and Dotty are in the middle of an unhappy love
affair.
Poppy, the assistant stage manager is pregnant; and Selsdon
Mowbray, an actor in his late sixties, is trying to stay sober between scenes.
Add to this, a visit by director Lloyd, who is there first of all to
comfort his overly excited lover, Brooke, and second to try and
save his play from total disaster.
Most of the company is in a continual
state of agitation, and this disorder is carrying over into the play, causing
missed entrances, flubbed lines, and general hilarity.
Act Three, It is a
month later again, and the tour is reaching an end.
We, the audience,
are out front again, watching a performance of Nothing On that has reached the
point of complete and hilarious deterioration. The business of performing the
show has become subordinate to the business of solving personal problems.
Dotty refuses to come out of her dressing room.
Garry is now drinking
Selsdons whiskey.
Scenery collapses, and props explode.
Practical
jokes have become common, and actors are now taking verbal, and sometimes
physical, cracks at each other both backstage and on stage.
Normal rules of
logic and response dont apply anymore. Ultimately, however, they carry
off the show--in some semblance.
The unhappy band of actors manages to get
to the last line, spoken by Selsdon: When all around is strife and
uncertainty, theres nothing like . . . (takes the plate of sardines) . .
. a good old-fashioned plate of curtain!
Potters Bar Theatre Company
Feb 23-24-26-27+Mat
Back