For Florida's sole remaining sex surrogate, love is a many splintered thing.
It's not just giant companies cashing in on America's defense industry.
How a throwaway idea at the Barkley ad agency became the "Sonic Guys."
A diner's guide to Texas's oldest Mexican restaurants.
The actors add lots of improvised bits to the script — including a reference to Obama and a jibe at Hillary Clinton that I shouldn't have laughed at (it was sexist) but did — and there are some notable inside jokes, too. About to stab Julius Caesar, the actors stop and say, "We will now pause for fifteen minutes" — a reference to Colorado Shakespeare Festival director Cynthia Croot's inexplicable decision to schedule the intermission of Julius Caesar at this precise point last summer.
Yes, this is pretty crude stuff. Unlike the work of the Trockaderos, whose sendup of ballet is enhanced by their profound understanding of the form, The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (abridged) isn't a tribute; it doesn't try to get inside Shakespeare's texts. The real joke, the show suggests, is that no one really gets Shakespeare anyway. But then there's one moment that suggests otherwise: Amid all the craziness, Mueller stops and quietly recites Hamlet's "What a piece of work is a man...," and the poetry and profundity contrast wonderfully with the zaniness of the rest of the action.
I loved Susan Crabtree's big, bright set, in which Shakespeare looms against the back wall, all twinkly and jovial like the Ghost of Christmas Past, while his characters emerge through the portal of his huge bent legs. All three actors are terrific; they have presence, strong voices, a good sense of humor and the ability to engage directly with the audience. You can tell that each of them would give a good account of himself playing Shakespeare straight. Perhaps the football game could be a bit cleaner. Perhaps the Titus bit doesn't compare to Buntport's sublimely inventive spoof of the same play — and it would have been such fun if the chef had been, say, a profane Gordon Ramsey sound-alike rather than just generic and mildly Sweeney Todd-ish.
The Complete Works may be a blunt instrument, void of deeper meaning and kind of dumb, but the energy of the evening is sublime, and I can't remember when I last laughed so hard and so long.