DEARLY DEPARTED

by

David Bottrell & Jessie Jones

10 July to 20 July 1996

Directed by Simone de Haas


Cast List


















Review

Comedy Policy is a Winner

Alison Cotes - City News - 18 July 1996

"There's enough sadness and misery in the world without going to see it in the theatre," as my dear departed grandmother used to say, but sadness and misery take on a very droll tone in Dearly Departed, the latest offering from Mixed Company, whose admirable policy is to do nothing but comedy.


Dearly Departed is a play about Happy Families in the American Deep South, and begins with the demise of one Bud, officially from a stroke but more probably from the terror induced by a letter from his born-again Christian sister declaring her intention of descending on them to spend an afternoon praying and leading them back to the Lord. "One day with the Lord is as a thousand years" she reminds Bud, who immediately opts for the thousand years rather than a visit from his Bible-bashing sister.


This simple plot device sets the scene for a gathering of the clan, where all the clichés of character types below the Mason-Dixon line are exploited, sometimes to hilarious effect.

We have the inarticulate gum-chewing teenager, the ne'er-do-well son of the religious fanatic, the faithless husband and failed businessman with his shrewish wife, the toothy preacher - in short, it's just like Tennessee Williams sending himself up.


The play is an endearing little piece of nonsense which takes the Southern myths and exposes them to the cold light of reality. The consolation of religion, community spirit, loving families, speaking well of the dead, the Christian charity - they all get a beating, and although the play doesn't say anything new about the serpents that lurk in every Eden, it says it wittily and well.


Director Simone de Haas has licked her cast into shape very successfully, and I suspect that even my dear departed high-minded grandmother would get a laugh out of this production.


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