Minneapolis » By neighborhood:
St. Paul » By neighborhood:

Site navigation

By section

SMTWTFS
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

THEATER | "White Sheep of the Family," a sharp farce at Theatre in the Round

David McMenomy (left) and H. Wesley McLain in White Sheep of the Family. Photo © Act One, Too, Ltd.

December 01, 2008

You’re not going to find a stronger theater company in the Twin Cities than the Theatre in the Round Players, and they’ve done it again, mounting yet another first-rate production. The White Sheep of the Family, by L. du Garde Peach and Ian Hay, is a splendidly written, sharply directed, beautifully acted farce you’re going to rush home and tell family, friends—pretty much anyone who’ll listen—all about.

the white sheep of the family, a play written by l. du garde peach and ian hay, directed by dann peterson. presented through december 14 at theatre in the round, 245 cedar ave., minneapolis. for tickets ($20) and information, see theatreintheround.org.
The Winters are a reputable, well-to-do household, proudly sustaining a generations-old tradition—of thievery. Patriarch James (H. Wesley McClain) is internationally regarded as the best burglar in England. The lady of the house, Alice (Diana Wilde), is a pickpocket’s pickpocket. So is daughter Pat (L. J. Johnson). The Winters are a gracious lot who don’t look down their nose at the hired help: Alice and Pat have taken the maid, Janet (Valarie Falken), under their wing as an apprentice. They let her practice on them—lifting their wallets, palming brooches and earrings—until she’s good enough to go out and steal from strangers.

All are quite contentedly living the larcenous good life. Then, a crisis of scandalous proportions crashes in on their existence. Peter Winter, the brilliant young forger of the clan, decides to go straight. James is disappointed but determined to bring him back into the fold. Alice is absolutely aghast. Pat is ready to disown him. What to do, what to do? Therein lies the hang-onto-your-seat hilarity.

Completing a strong cast are David Schlosser as the family’s tacky, not quite on the up-and-up fence; Amber Rose Reilly as Peter’s fiancée; Jim Bitney as her dad the assistant police commissioner; and, just about stealing the show, Dwight Gunderson in a delightful turn as the doddering, senile vicar who’d forget where he put his head were it not sewn on. Dann Peterson directs with an artful hand, keeping the pace lively and bringing out the best in his actors. The script takes a minute or two to get going but quickly kicks into gear, crisp dialogue sustaining a haywire story. Toward the end, it’ll seem like the authors are about to pull an implausible rabbit of the hat and give this fine tale a tepid ending. Stay with it, because that’s when they really put you away with a spirited, I-never-saw-it-coming climax.

Dwight Hobbes is a writer based in the Twin Cities. He contributes regularly to the Daily Planet.

Comments

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
8 + 7 =
Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.

Things People Say

Blow by blow, ballot by ballot

The Daily Kos writes that the “smell of desperation is approaching lutefisk levels in MN. (EPA warning for elevated levels of airborne toxins).” The Strib reports that the Coleman camp rejected 59 of 60 absentee ballots that elections officials in St. Louis County said should be counted. Among those rejected by the Coleman reps was election judge Shirley Graham, who voted absentee because she is an election judge in a precinct other than her own. Final irony, says the Strib: she voted for Coleman. MORE »

BOOKS | "Skirmish": Bitterly funny poetry from Dobby Gibson

To be honest, I’ve never been an avid reader of poetry. I have nothing against poems, but for some reason my mind wants words on a page to present themselves as prose, and balks at taking them seriously when they’re organized in rhymed couplets, sonnet form, or—God forbid—free verse. When verse is set to music, I can generally handle it better. One reason I found Minneapolis poet Dobby Gibson’s new collection, Skirmish, so enjoyable is that his combination of mordant wit and bittersweet longing so recalls the lyrics of my favorite songwriter, Bob Dylan. MORE »