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Sons harbor envy and resentment and a secret you will probably guess
By Lucy Komisar
“Losing Louis” was a big hit in London. Maybe it lost in
the translation from “Louis” to “Louie” as it crossed The Pond. If this is
British humor, it’s of the “No Sex Please, We’re British” variety, not of the
Tom Stoppard sort. Except for a couple of funny one-liner jokes told as jokes,
not as part of the plot, this is a pot-boiler which author Simon Mendes da Costa
attempts to enliven with a sprinkling of sexual vulgarities. Do we really need
to hear two middle-aged men discussing the advantages and disadvantages of
having or not having a foreskin? Or see a man and woman offering to perform oral
sex on their partners?
The family drama – moved from England to the upscale New
York suburb of Pound Ridge -- revolves around Louie (Scott Cohen), who in the
first time-period, the early 60s, is cheating on his wife with their law school
student boarder, Bella (Jama Williamson).
The 6-year-old son, Tony, discovers the affair, and what he
knows and tells will be revealed in the future/present. Meanwhile, Bella gets
pregnant and marries her Navy boyfriend. Louie’s subservient homebody wife,
Bobbie (Rebecca Creskoff), miscarries.
The play switches back and forth between then and now, when
Tony (Mark Linn-Baker) is a paunchy 50 and dad has just died.
Now Tony has a wife, the brassy, zaftig Sheila (Michele
Pawk). Tony is a diamond cutter, struggling economically; his daughter Claire is
apparently retarded and institutionalized. He drives an economy hatchback.
His brother, the well-turned out Reggie (Matthew Arkin) is
a lawyer. He is married to the svelte, elegant Elizabeth (Patricia Kalember),
and their kids get good grades in high school. Reggie and Elizabeth each drive a
luxury car. Yes, it’s all very pat.
Tony is jealous and resentful and angry. Reggie is playing
around. They both carry guilt relating to Louie. There is a bit of mystery
involved, which my seat partner had solved by intermission. But it does make you
want to hang around just to see what transpires in the second act.
If you are looking for subtlety, you won’t find it here.
Nor will you find very good acting, perhaps with the exception of Kalember who
is not as cartoonish as the others. Cohen is utterly flat as Louie, and
Williamson is not much better as Bella. There are no sparks between them, so you
wonder why they go to such trouble to carry out their quasi-clandestine affair.
The Linn-Baker and Michele Pawk Tony-Sheila duo is of the one-dimensional TV
sitcom sort, complete with a garish tie that wife picks out for his birthday.
Jerry Zaks is normally a very fine director. One is at a
loss to understand why he chose to direct such a crude, predictable play and how
he presented it in such an unexceptional fashion.
Manhattan Theatre Club at Biltmore Theatre, 261 W. 47 St.
Tue-Sat 8 pm; Sat & Sun 2 pm; Sun 7 pm. Running time: 2:25. Through Dec. 10,
2006. $56.25-$86.25. 212-239-6200.
"Losing Louie," Written by Simon Mendes da Costa. Directed
by Jerry Zaks. Starring Matthew Arkin, Scott Cohen, Mark Linn-Baker, Patricia
Kalember, Jan Maxwell, Michele Pawk, Ana Reeder, Jama Williamson.
Photos by Joan Marcus.
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