Cast of Sherlock Holmes (Chris Bennion) |
Sherlock Holmes and
the American Problem
Seattle Repertory Theatre
Through May 22, 2016
Our community has had some real successes bringing new
Sherlock Holmes material to life in the last few years. John Longenbaugh had his Sherlock
Holmes and the Case of the Christmas Carol done to great acclaim in 2010
and again in 2011. In 2013, the Seattle Rep staged R. Hamilton Wright and David
Pichette's adaptation of "The Hound of the Baskervilles." That
also was greeted with delight.
There was a good deal of anticipation when the Rep announced
that they would do another Holmes play from Wright (without Pichette this time),
a new work entitled Sherlock Holmes and
the American Problem. This concept entwines historic American Annie Oakley
with her lauded visit to Britain with a mystery involving murder, theft of a
tunnel-boring machine (deliberate shades of Bertha!), and Sherlock’s estranged
older brother.
Many of the talented and fun cast of the 2013 Sherlock returned for more fun. Darragh Keenan reprises his role as the
irascible and temperamental Holmes and Andrew
McGinn as his sidekick Dr. Watson. Marianne
Owen comes back as the redoubtable housekeeper, and Rob Burgess and Charles
Leggett chime in with smaller characters.
In addition, this time, Cheyanne
Casebier plays a mysterious American scientist who has lost her boring
machine, Alex Matthews and Tim Gouran are ensemble members, and Christine Marie Brown plays Miss Phoebe
Anne Moses, who turns out to also be Annie Oakley (her stage name).
L.B. Morse again
does yeoman work on the scenic design and lighting and projections, giving us
the hustle of London streets, the maps of the city, and spare set changes that
fly in and out in quick location changes. Allison
Narver works to direct this game cast, but is hampered at times by
underwritten roles and underused talent.
Poor Ms. Owen doesn’t have anything more to do in this
iteration than pour endless cups of coffee and serve scones. In the 2013 story,
she at least had more than one character which gave her some real acting to do.
You’re probably now thinking, having read this far, that
this isn’t going to be a rave. While there are some good ideas, and sometimes a
decent joke or two, the entire work does not hang together well. It is HARD to
write Sherlock Holmes and if it weren’t then lots of people would do it. Wright
grasps many of the aspects of a mystery, but the mystery itself is not always the
fun part of a Holmes work, as much as how Holmes solves it and how opaque the
clues are to the audience.
Ultimately, it ends up being talky and feels long, and there
is a tacked on scene at the end that explains some things we mostly don’t even
care to know by that point. It feels generally enjoyable, mostly because of the
cast and the gorgeous set and costumes (by Deb
Trout). Sometimes, you can appreciate much of an effort, even when it doesn’t
all hang together, and still have fun.
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