Playhouse socks a homer with ‘Rounding Third’
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Tom Titus
Opposites attract, occasionally, but more often than not they
repel -- a circumstance that has provided dramatic fodder for
playwrights ranging from Neil Simon (“The Odd Couple”) to Sam Shepard
(“True West”).
The clash between diametrically opposed forces has been the
backbone of the theater since the ancient Greeks. But rarely has it
been so out-and-out hilarious as in Richard Dresser’s new play
“Rounding Third,” now at the Laguna Playhouse in only its second
performance ever -- it premiered last year in Chicago.
The battleground here is the Little League baseball field, and the
combatants are a pair of coaches -- a rough-hewn veteran who espouses
the philosophy of Vince Lombardi (“Winning isn’t everything, it’s the
only thing”) and his green assistant, who subscribes more to
Grantland Rice’s ideals (“It’s not whether you win or lose, but how
you play the game”).
At Laguna, director Andrew Barnicle has mounted a superior
two-character comedy with occasional twinges of drama that come at
you from, well, left field. The fact that both of these characters
have personal issues -- and pretty deep ones -- provides the required
dramatic balance that rescues the play from the abyss of total farce.
As the old-line coach, Michael Mulheren displays all the charm and
sophistication of Archie Bunker, with a touch of Ralph Kramden thrown
in from time to time. As written, his character of Don is a virtual
Neanderthal in the coaching business, but Mulheren manages to find
snatches of humanity buried beneath the bluster, inevitably
projecting the difficulty he experiences in doing so.
Kevin Symons’ Michael is a complete fish out of water, pursuing
his craft only to lend moral support to his Nepalese stepson -- who
just happens to be the klutziest player on the team. As he continues
imploring Mulheren not to call him “Mike” or, even worse, “Mikey,”
Symons gradually grows in his position, though not without some
embarrassing stumbles along the way, such as hitting a fungo ball
through the window of Don’s van.
While “Rounding Third” isn’t quite about Archie and the Meathead,
there are definite parallels. Symons’ humanitarian approach to youth
baseball completely galls Mulheren’s character, and the older coach
counters with some vicious, though extremely funny, jibes. It’s
Mulheren’s blunt, broadside delivery that produces most of the
guffaws, but Symons gets his comic licks in, as well.
Dresser alters the tone in the second act from the continual punch
line to an examination of both men’s characters -- and the
psychological pain both endure but choose to keep hidden.
Mulheren’s complete dismantling of Symons’ cell phone, a la
Gallagher and his watermelons, earns sustained applause, as do some
of the elder coach’s disparaging remarks about the local junior high
school’s musical “Brigadoon” -- which predictably come back bite him
on the backside.
The playwright also employs a gimmick he himself learned as an
assistant Little League coach -- ordering a player to fake an injury
so that a swifter pinch runner might be inserted -- as a plot device
for “Rounding Third,” with the twist being its unintentional use by
the upright assistant who has resoundingly decried this policy.
The sparse backdrops of scenic and costume designer Dwight Richard
Odle work particularly well for this show, as do Paulie Jenkins’
lighting effects.
You don’t have to be a dyed-in-the-wool baseball fan to get a huge
kick out of “Rounding Third,” though it certainly helps. This is a
play local community theaters will be struggling to get their hands
on once it’s released for non-professional production.
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