THEATRE
Written by Neil Simon
At Comedy Theatre, Melbourne until 23 June 2024
Reviewer: Kate Herbert
Stars: **** (4)
This review is published only on this blog. I’ll present a radio review on Arts Weekly on 3MBS on Sat 1 JUNE 2024. KH
Todd McKenney and Shane Jacobson (c) Pia Johnson |
Neil Simon’s play, The Odd Couple, is witty, often laugh out loud observational humour about two quirky characters and their even quirkier relationship. The man was a comic genius!
Although Simon’s characters became household names because of the television series starring Tony Randall and Jack Klugman, and the movie with Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau as the eponymous odd couple, this 1965 stage version preceded both.
The focus of the narrative and most of the comedy is the relationship between Oscar (Shane Jacobsen) and Felix (Todd McKenney), friends who are polar opposites: Oscar is a scruffy, grubby, divorced and grumbling sportswriter who lives in relative squalor in an eight-room house; Felix is a straightlaced, hypochondriacal, socially dysfunctional misfit, whose wife recently booted him out because she couldn’t stand him anymore.
The peculiar friendship between Oscar and Felix was based on a weekly poker game with their four pals. When Oscar invites Felix to move into his big empty house, it becomes more than sharing space. They are like a squabbling, old married couple who have completely different modes of living: Felix is obsessively tidy, loves to cook and clean, doesn’t like to socialise, cries a lot and complains about his health; Oscar loves to drink, gamble, cavort, mess up the house and clean nothing. They are genuinely the odd couple.
These glaring differences, of course, are the basis of Simon’s comedy. The clash of personalities and lifestyles becomes ridiculous and more exaggerated as the story progresses, until finally Oscar cannot bear Felix anymore.
Mark Kilmurry’s direction of this production is deft and playful. Jacobsen is suitably rambunctious and bulldog-ish as the increasingly intolerant Oscar, while McKenney is appropriately nervy and annoying – or rather, maddening – as Felix.
The entire supporting cast is versatile and hilarious: Lucy Durack and Penny McNamee are very funny as the twittering, girlish and totally in-sync British sisters, Cecily and Gwendolyn (Yes, their names are drawn holus bolus from Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest).
Oscar and Felix’s poker playing buddies – Laurence Coy as Speed, Anthony Taufa as Murray, John Batchelor as Roy and Jamie Oxenbould as Vinnie – are as eccentric as their hosts and provide plenty of laughs, particularly in the opening scene before Oscar and Felix arrive. This is a versatile and vibrant cast.
The Odd Couple is almost a can’t-fail show and Kilmurry’s production is clearly a hit with audiences.
by Kate Herbert
Cast
Shane Jacobsen – Oscar
Todd McKenney – Felix
Lucy Durack – Cecily Pigeon
Penny McNamee – Gwendolyn Pigeon
Laurence Coy – Speed
Anthony Taufa – Murray
John Batchelor – Roy
Jamie Oxenbould – Vinnie.
Creative Team
Directed by Mark Kilmurry
Designer - Justin Nardella
Lighting Designer - Trudy Dalgliesh
Sound Designer - Michael Waters.
Shane Jacobson with poker players (c) Pia Johnson |
Shane Jacobson, Todd McKenney, Lucy Durack and Penny McNamee (c) Pia Johnson |
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