‘Giant Rat’ at OCC offers inspired performances
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Tom Titus
When you scan the program and find character names such as “Caped
Fiend,” “Vicious Rascal” and “Evil Doer,” it’s pretty evident that
the show in question is not to be taken seriously -- even if the
names of the creators (Jack Sharkey and Tim Kelly) haven’t already
offered an advance clue.
To be sure, “Sherlock Holmes and the Giant Rat of Sumatra” was not
among the many mysteries from the master wordsmith Arthur Conan Doyle
-- he even merits an apology in the program at Orange Coast College,
where this farcical mystery with music is playing through Sunday.
Sharkey and Kelly, separately and together, particularly enjoyed
taking potshots at legendary fictional characters (Sharkey, of El
Toro, has long since passed away), so a satirical slice of Sherlock
would seem, well, elementary. And that’s pretty much the level of the
piece, though it receives some inspired interpretation from OCC’s
enthusiastic performers under the direction of Alex Golson, with Beth
Hansen at the piano.
To begin with, in the local version, the master detective is a
boyish-looking sleuth (Rudolph Niemann) attended by a continually
miffed Dr. Watson (Michael R. Cavinder), who overestimates his own
importance -- at least in Holmes’ opinion. The reason given for
Watson’s never committing this adventure to print is groaningly
specious.
Niemann has captured his character’s incredibly egocentric nature
and understated authority beautifully in a finely articulated
performance. Cavinder simmers with a fine blend of admiration and
discomfited envy as the second banana.
Holmes’ archenemy, Professor Moriarty, doesn’t have much to do
until the second act except toss in a melodramatic cackle every now
and then. But when the plot thickens, Sean F. Gray brings his
character’s evil genius to the fore with a vengeance in an
outrageously zealous performance.
Gray, indeed, is the most watchable element of the show, but he’s
aptly challenged for that honor by Emily Rued as a slinky Asian femme
fatale called Oolong, who uses her hypnotic eyes much to the same
effect as Jack the Ripper (yes, he’s here too, sort of) employs a
dagger. Rued is a familiar figure on the OCC stage, and her work in
this show, while all too brief, is memorable indeed.
The aforementioned weapon is the central element in a rather
outlandish plot involving a cult of Sumatran rat worshipers, but it’s
Moriatry’s scheme for world domination and Holmes’ elimination that
are brought center stage.
Along the way, the large OCC chorus of colorful background
characters belts out Sharkey’s musical message (including one snippet
borrowed from Stephen Sondheim).
Harriet C. Whitmyer doubles as Holmes’ giddy landlady, Mrs.
Hudson, and a surprise character inserted as a red herring late in
the show. Megan M. Zuliani is properly aristocratic as Holmes’
desperate client, while Katie McGuire scores as her queasy companion.
Heather Leanna cutely plays a ditsy damsel in distress, and Teddy
Spencer is properly clueless as Scotland Yard’s Inspector Lestrade.
All this inspired craziness is carried out against an imposing
backdrop designed by David Scaglione that includes a glimpse of Big
Ben and a fiendishly designed “shrinking machine” ... and eventually
the gargantuan vermin of the title. Cynthia Corley’s creative period
costuming further enhances the production.
That this particular Sherlock Holmes mystery is also a musical may
not advance the plot, but it does enrich the proceedings,
particularly during the sequence in which Holmes and Watson perform a
vaudeville-style buck and wing while warbling “Wendy, the Winsome
Wench from Worstershire.”
“Sherlock Holmes and the Giant Rat of Sumatra” may not be great
theater, but it certainly is great fun. OCC may be facing some severe
budget cuts in its theatrical program, but the college has pulled out
all the stops for this production.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
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