Monday, July 21, 2014

Stage 3 'On Golden Pond' - "good laughs with a poignant edge" by Shari Schweigler



You know how America loved Archie Bunker?  Even though he was an irascible bigot who verbally abused his wife Edith and his son-in-law “Meathead,” audiences identified with him and sympathized with this “little guy” trying to make the world work for him.


Now imagine Archie as an intellectual, a long-married, retired professor who also has problems making the world work the way he wants.  You have Norman Thayer, Jr., the lead character in Ernest Thompson’s On Golden Pond, being produced by Stage 3 in Sonora. You may be familiar with the movie version of this play, which starred Henry Fonda, Kathryn Hepburn, and Jane Fonda, but if you haven’t seen the play, you are in for some good laughs with a poignant edge. 

Courtesy photo



Michael Lynch brings all the believability you could want to Norman, a guy who is perpetually dissatisfied and wants everyone to know it.  His long-suffering yet cheerful wife Ethel, played sensitively by Francine La Meire, puts up with a lot but plainly loves this man and feels loved by him, showing concern if he gets a little worse than usual. Norman’s cynicism has a droll wittiness that rises above Archie Bunker’s negativity and provides much of the play’s humor. But curiously, Norman’s point of view prevents his enjoyment of life every bit as much as Archie’s does.

This summer at his vacation home Norman is morose over turning 80 and not being as mentally sharp as he was in younger days.  Then we find out that his daughter Chelsea, played by Katryn Weston, has kept an eight-year absence that she is about to break, and Norman complains. We want to know what this estrangement is all about.

New life blows into the cottage on Golden Pond in the form of 13-year-old Billy, the son of Chelsea’s boyfriend.   After failed marriages, Chelsea and Bill, Sr. are looking for a second chance, and Norman finds one too, by developing a relationship with Billy that is apparently much more accepting than the one he had with his own daughter while she was growing up.  As Chelsea, Weston does a good job of making the awkwardness between her and her father obvious. There is redemption for this family, but not before they have some hard talks, cracking open some truths that have never been said.

Actor Ben Adriano portrays both Bill, Sr. and mailman Charlie Martin, who dated Chelsea for many years. His conversation with her as Charlie and his conversation with Norman as Bill are spot-on and help bring about some of the much-needed change in this family. Colin Gordon plays Billy with the honesty that kids often have, and that adds enormously to the hope the play portrays.

One of the pleasures of this production is the incidental music used between scenes and during intermission.  Director Jon Dambacher has chosen songs from the 50’s and 60’s that really reflect what’s going on.  Artists such as Brenda Lee, Lesley Gore, Connie Francis, Conway Twitty, and Johnny Mathis will fill you with nostalgia as well as understanding. We get to hear father and daughter, Frank and Nancy Sinatra, sing a most appropriate song, “(And then I go and spoil it all by saying) Something Stupid.” Another good choice for this play is Doris Day’s “Que Sera, Sera.”

Ron Cotnam and Matt Leamy have created a lovely set and lighting design to make us feel we are in a cabin in the woods on a lake in Maine. And Diana Newington’s costumes catch just the right feel.

You can see “On Golden Pond” Thursdays through Sundays until August 10.  Call Stage 3 at (209)536-1778 or visit the website at www.Stage3.org.


by
Shari Schweigler