"Multi-faced Doors opens audiences to a
world of fun" "... the
current show at Silver Spring Stage Communicating Doors
is the best comedy involving murder mysteries and time travel ...
this Alan Ayckbourn play is one of the most entertaining comedies
in a while and the Stage’s production is top notch. ... This
is really a showcase for the actresses. Rachel Demma as Poopay,
Rachel Duda as first wife Jessica and Toni Carmine as second wife
Ruella do a great job as three women in a strange situation across
decades who come to rely on one another. ... All of this time traveling
scenario could be a gimmick and little more, but there is a surprise
that I will not spoil. Let’s just say that you cannot predict
the ending, even though in retrospect it makes very logical sense."
--- David Cannon, Montgomery Sentinal, April 24, 2008 Read
the Article
"... a very good production ... comedy was really
funny"
"Communicating Doors ... It’s
a time traveling comic thriller. ... the way the three women and
the other actors all related to each other I thought was very strong
and made for an enjoyable performance. ... A London sex specialist
from the future stumbles into a murder plot that sends her, via
a unique set of hotel room doors, traveling back in time. She and
two women who were murdered in 1978 and 1998 race back and forth
in time to rewrite history and prevent their own violent ends."
--- ShowBizRadio, April 16, 2008 Read/Listen
to the Review
Silver Spring Stage presents the comedy thriller
Communicating Doors by Alan Ayckbourn, directed
by Lenora Dernoga and produced by Celeste MacMillan. A London sex
specialist stumbles into a murder plot that sends her traveling
back in time. She and two women who were murdered race back and
forth in time to rewrite history and prevent their own violent ends.
Communicating Doors will run weekends April 11
to May 4, 2008.
Silver Spring Stage is located in the Woodmoor Shopping Center,
lower level (next to the CVS) at Colesville Road and University
Boulevard. Ticket prices range from $13 to $18. Performances are
Friday and Saturday at 8:00 PM and Sunday matinees on April 20 and
May 4 at 2:00 PM. Tickets can be purchased at www.ssstage.org. Information
is also available by calling (301) 593-6036.
''Time is just one color in the playwright's palette,'' Alan Ayckbourn
has said, ''to be spread, mixed, thinned and splattered as required.''
The most prolific English playwright in history, Ayckbourn has stylishly
used and reinvented nearly every theatrical style in a career that
has spawned 71 full-length plays. Sometimes characterized as the
Neil Simon of Britain, Ayckbourn has never settled for a single
moniker of his works. His superb writing and willingness to experiment
with theatrical language truly makes every one of his works an adventure
for actors and audiences. He truly has had a life led in the theatre,
starting at the age of 17 in one of Britain’s old touring
companies. He worked his way through the provinces as an actor,
scene painter and more until dissatisfied with the roles he played,
he took pen to paper and wrote his own. He hasn’t stopped
since. Even his recent announcement of retirement from his position
at theatre in North Yorkshire, won’t stop him from continuing
to direct and write. Communicating Doors was first
performed in 1994 and went on to Best Play of 1996 award
from the Writer's Guild of Britain. As entertaining and
engaging as Communicating Doors is with its clever
time-travel device, the play does explore the ideas of fate and
free will and whether or not people can control their own destiny.
These are matters we all wish to find answers for ourselves. So,
hop on the time travel train and enjoy Communicating Doors!
Communicating Doors begins and ends twenty years
in the future. As the play opens, an ailing Reece Wells (Peter Nigra),
wealthy businessman and owner of the Regal Hotel, is in his suite
with Julian Goodman (James Raby), his friend and business partner.
Reece has called for the services of a self-styled "special
sexual consultant" (a leather clad dominatrix) by the name
of Poopay (Rachel Demma). After Julian departs, we learn that the
only service Reece desires of Poopay is that she witness a document.
In anticipation of his impending death, he wants to confess all
of the terrible acts that he and Julian have committed. (These range
from simple dishonesty to the murder of both of his wives.) When
Julian returns and Poopay needs to make a quick exit, she uses the
communicating door. Instead of taking her into the room next door,
it returns her to the same room twenty years earlier when it was
occupied by Reece's second wife, Ruella (Toni Carmine). It is the
very night on which, according to the confession, Ruella is to be
thrown from the balcony by Julian. When Ruella and Poopay figure
out what has happened, they realize they must get her out of there.
When Ruella passes through the door, however, she does not go forward
in time; she goes back another twenty years, when the same suite
is occupied by Reece and his first wife, Jessica (Rachel Duda),
on their wedding night, seven years before the time when Reece confesses
she was killed. What follows are adventures that hilarious and nefarious
and not to be missed!
The cast also features Eric Burgan as Harold. The
production team includes Marcia Kolko (Assistant Director), Meaghan
Callahan (Stage Manager), Linda Bartash (Set Design), Kevin P. Garrett
(Sound Design), Sarah Kendrick (Costume Design), Chris Curtis (Light
Design), and Keith Brown (Master Carpenter).
The Stage's 40th anniversary season continues with Come Back
to the Five and Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean (May 30-June 22);
and a play to be announced (July 11-Aug. 3). Silver Spring Stage
is grateful for support from the Arts and Humanities Council of
Montgomery County and the Maryland State Arts Council.
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