by Paul Birchall on October 27, 2015
in Theater-Los Angeles
HOME AND HEART
When you go to Pacific Resident Theatre in Venice, one of the great pleasures is seeing performers Orson Bean and his wife Alley Mills hanging out in the lobby either manning the concession stand or assisting in helping folks to their seats (that is, if they aren’t actually in the show). Both Bean and Mills will seem familiar to you–and with good reason: In addition to their multiple turns on the PRT stage, both have appeared in movies, plays, and TV programs that span the Golden Eras of all those genres. Bean in particular is seemingly ubiquitous in your most cherished projects. My personal favorite was his performance in the legendary animated version of The Hobbit, vocalizing the role of that fidgety hobbit, Bilbo Baggins, long before the bloated Peter Jackson movies.
In his autobiographical solo outing, Bean comes across as a delightfully avuncular fellow, equal parts relative from your last Thanksgiving dinner and movie star with a heart of glamorous gold. Particularly surprising is the subject’s unexpected modesty. Bean’s story encompasses his childhood in a small town outside of Boston, including his start in show business debuting as a stand up at a prestigious New York cabaret. Then the work essentially breezes to his comfortable later years, resulting in a depiction of a man basically at two points in time: youth and maturity. It’s a good thing that he skips the expected laundry list of credits: It keeps him grounded as one who is just like us, and not some unimaginable celebrity.
Director Guillermo Cienfuegos’s sweet, but never sentimental, production allows Bean to emerge as a genial, unfailingly modest figure (he’s first glimpsed pushing a cocktail cart covered with magic tricks). Thus his description of an ineffably sad childhood avoids being maudlin. A chance audition at a nightclub earns him a fill-in performance spot which in turn gets him a mention in Walter Winchell’s newspaper column. After that, his rise seems unstoppable.
He skips over much of the career building stuff, which doesn’t seem perplexing when you realize while watching Bean that all the trappings of wordly success matter little without stability of soul; the show’s final third basically focuses on what he believes is the “miracle” of the latter part of his life: his love for, and marriage to, Ms. Mills.
Periodically, when his stories threaten to become a little too heavy, he interrupts the potentially downbeat moment by performing some dazzling legerdemain; Bean performed as a magician in his early days, and the twinkle in his eyes as he trots out a hoary ol’ card trick is irresistible. This entertainment is light and charming, but the surface geniality belies a lifetime of fierce devotion to art. The tone often possesses an elegiac quality, as Bean artfully (and with little regret) provides a fascinating meditation on the things that truly matter and those that only seem to matter.
photos by Vitor Martins
Safe at Home: An Evening with Orson Bean
Pacific Resident Theatre
703 Venice Blvd. in Venice
Thurs-Sat at 8; Sun at 3
ends on November 29, 2015
for tickets, call 310.822.8392 or visit PRT
– See more at: http://www.stageandcinema.com/2015/10/27/safe-at-home-orson-bean-prt/#sthash.FccNgagJ.dpuf
One comment for “Los Angeles Theater Review: SAFE AT HOME: AN EVENING WITH ORSON BEAN (PRT in Venice)”
This weekend check out Pacific Resident Theatre’s Safe At Home: An evening with Orson Bean. Closing night is Sun. April 10. Get your tickets now! : Venice Paparazzi | Venice Beach Guide, Photography, Pictures, Deals, Nightlife, Hotels
[…] Stage and Cinema Reviews Safe At Home. In his autobiographical solo outing, Bean comes across as a delightfully avuncular fellow, equal parts relative from your last Thanksgiving dinner and movie star with a heart of glamorous gold. Particularly surprising is the subject’s unexpected modesty. […]