Superbly orchestrated by guest director David Henderson
and brilliantly performed by Eric Carl, Mike Raab, and Adam Twiss,
Theatre In The Park’s zany presentation of The
Complete History of America (Abridged) promotes the paranoid
view of American History … for laughs. Big laughs. This radically
revamped version of the original Reduced Shakespeare Company script
brings Adam Long, Reed Martin, and Austin Tichenor’s History up-to-date
with pinpoint jabs at “South Park,” Lindsay Lohan, Anna
Nicole Smith, and, of course, President George W. Bush.
This is a wild-and-crazy show in which the Single Bullet Theory
from the JFK assassination is introduced in 1775 to explain the Colonial
militia fatalities during Battle at Lexington Green, at the start
of the American Revolution; the Minutemen are lampooned as minute (pronounced “my-newt”)
men and played by two cast members on their knees; Lewis & Clark
become a vaudeville act; the Lincoln assassination is played for
laughs; and Cold War paranoia is transformed into a hilarious film-noir
spoof with Mike Raab, in drag, playing Lucille Ball arrogantly brandishing
a cigarette holder as she might have played Lucy Ricardo’s
evil twin.
Not even a terrible accident early on, when a ceramic bowl filled
with water slipped out of Mike Raab’s hands and hit a ringside
female TIP volunteer in the face, could dampen this incandescent
evening in which three of the Triangle’s finest actors poke
not-so-gentle fun at everyone historical, from our Forefathers and
Mothers to our most recent presidents, with Nixon, Reagan, and both
the Bushes being prime targets for the RSC’s razor-sharp satirical
pens. (The volunteer miraculously escaped with a few minor cuts and
scratches.)
Too much of a rundown on who does what to whom — and when
they do it — during the course of this madcap 90-minute entertainment
would spoil much of the fun. A good part of the humor in The
Complete History of America (Abridged) comes from the surprise
appearance of historical icons in unfamiliar — and usually
apocryphal — roles and the whiplash-inducing transitions from
sketch to sketch, a la the dizzying segues of the old Firesign Theatre,
whose off-the-wall humor obviously inspired a host of subsequent
acts, including the Reduced Shakespeare Company.
Suffice it to say, Mike Raab gets to play the Fool — as well
as the Girl — big time, for big laughs. Eric Carl brings a
succession of effete snobs flamboyantly to life; he gets in touch
with his sinister side as he portrays an “X-Files”-like
Conspiracy Man to a fare-thee-well, and he also impishly impersonates
Presidents Nixon and Reagan. And Adam Twiss tackles various straight
roles with brio and creates a host of rococo characters with wry
wit.
Director David Henderson, set and lighting designer Steve Larson,
and costume designer Shawn Stewart-Larson combine to create a great
atmosphere for comedy. Together, they and the stellar cast make this
tongue-in-check History particularly
memorable. The revamped and updated script leaves no sacred ox ungored
and, from time to time, renders many a TIP patron helpless with laughter.
Theatre In The Park presents The
Complete History of America (Abridged) Thursday-Friday,
Sept. 6-7, at 8 p.m.; Saturday, Sept. 8, at 3 and 8 p.m.; and Sunday,
Sept. 9, at 3 p.m. in the Ira David Wood III Pullen Park Theatre,
107 Pullen Rd., Raleigh, North Carolina. $21 ($13 students and
active-military personnel and $15 seniors 60+). 919/831-6936 or
via etix @ the presenter's site. Note: Arts
Access, Inc. of Raleigh, NC (http://www.artsaccessinc.org/)
will audio describe the Sept. 6 performance. Theatre In The
Park: http://theatreinthepark.com/v02/sections02/currentproductions/historyamerica.html.
Reduced Shakespeare Company: http://www.reducedshakespeare.com/.
The Complete History of America (Abridged): http://www.reducedshakespeare.com/america.php.