Jean Marie Perchalski and Ed Pansullo abandon their stiff upper lips in the farce 'See How They Run.'
The spectacle of British people (stereotypically more uptight and repressed than Americans) landing in humorous situations is one reason that British comedy is often funnier than ours, at least from an American point of view. This observation definitely applies to the new Tabard Theatre production of Philip King’s See How They Run, in which a respectable English vicarage becomes a madhouse of hilarity. This classic 1940s farce comes complete with many of the genre’s hallmarks: slapstick humor, mistaken identity and a large cast of characters constantly running in and out of doors.
It’s difficult to decide which of these characters is the most entertaining. The town busybody, Miss Skillon (Jean Marie Perchalski), arrives at the vicarage to complain about the way the pulpit has been decorated before she is knocked unconscious, liquored up with a bottle of cooking sherry and shoved into a cupboard (this is much funnier than it sounds). The vicar himself (Ron Packard) is a fuddy-duddy who, ironically, spends most of the play dashing around in his underwear while his sexy wife, Penelope (Kayla Berghoff), has her own misadventures, beginning with the arrival of her old friend Clive (Josiah Frampton), who disguises himself as a vicar.
Added to the mix are Penelope’s uncle, the Bishop of Lax (John Baldwin), another vicar (Ed Pansullo) and an escaped Russian spy (Jason Minsky) disguised as (what else?) a vicar. The churchmen show amusing bewilderment at the awkward situations that occur, despite the efforts of Penelope and her flirtatious Cockney maid Ida (Lorie Goulart) to make everything appear normal.
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