Sandra Shipley as Mrs. Bradman, Charles Edwards
as Charles Condomine, Susan Louise O’Connor as Edith, Angela Lansbury as Madame
Arcati, Charlotte Parry as Ruth Condomine and Simon Jones as Dr. Bradman in the
North American tour of Noël Coward’s BLITHE SPIRIT. (Photo by Joan Marcus)
By James Karas
They don’t make them like they used to – if I may coin a phrase.
I mean plays like Noel Coward’s Blithe Spirit. When he wrote it in
1941 he called it an “improbable farce” but that does not do it justice. It is
a well-crafted play with wit, humour, style and a theatrical delight.
The current production playing at The Princess Wales has been brought
over from London and it does the play full justice. Michael Blakemore has the
expertise to direct a splendid production from all points of view and he does
so.
The “improbable” part of Blithe Spirit is the invitation of Madam
Arcati, a medium, to a séance. The medium is invited by novelist Charles Condomine
under false pretenses. He wants to learn something about mediums for his next
novel but the consequences are totally unexpected. Charles’ first wife returns from the “other
side” and he is the only one that can see and hear her. You get the idea of the
farcical possibilities of the plot.
Madame Arcati is not the most important character in the play but she is
certainly the most colourful and the instigator of much of the farce. It is a
great role for older actors who have the panache and comic talent to attempt
it. In the case of Angela Lansbury the term “older” is an understatement. The
woman is 89 and she tackles the role with relish. The audience loved her and
she joins the other theatrical legends who have done the role from Margaret
Rutherford down.
Charles Edwards as Charles Condomine, Jemima
Rooper as Elvira and Charlotte Parry as Ruth Condomine in the North American
tour of Noël Coward’s BLITHE SPIRIT. (Photo by Joan Marcus)
Madame Arcati provides the broad humour but the wit is delivered by
Charles (Charles Edwards), his second wife Ruth (Charlotte Parry) and his
ghostly first wife Elvira (Jemima Rooper).
Edwards and Parry can deliver the type of crisp, glass-cut dialogue that
can make the dullest prose sound like poetic. There is no dull prose in the
play but a good deal of repartee, polished dialogue and humour.
Rooper as Elvira is appropriately and delightfully ethereal and silly. Coward
never failed to invest humour even in the minor characters like the maid. Susan
Louise O’Connor is hilarious as Edith. Blakemore has her reach over the back of a
chair to pick up a tray. The chair is tall and the maid ends up dangling on top
of the chair as she tries to reach the tray. The chair climb is done slowly and
milked for all the laughter.
The audience loved the whole thing and gave the performance a standing
ovation.
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