Theater review:
Warmest of "Greetings!"
Posted By Peter D. Kramer On May 25, 2011
(7:43 am)
In
Theater Review
The word had gone out that on that
particular night — last Saturday — the world
was about to end.
So why were all these people laughing?
They were at Penguin Rep in Stony Point,
which kicked off its ambitious 34th season
the way it has the past three seasons, with
a clever comedy by Nyack playwright Tom
Dudzick. It runs through June 12.
This one is “Greetings!” about Andy
Gorski, a New York transplant who returns to
his very Catholic Pittsburgh home at
Christmas with Randi Stein, his
Jewish-atheist fiancée, in tow. Andy brings
Randi to Meet the Gorskis.
What follows, under Tom Caruso’s
sure-handed direction, is a slight but
charming story of the rekindling of spirit,
Christmas or otherwise.
Before the briskly paced evening is over,
assumptions will be challenged, old wounds
opened, questions answered and a little
magic woven.
Beth Fowler, a Tony nominee for “The Boy
From Oz,” is Emily Gorski, a Pittsburgh
housewife to former baseball pitcher Phil
Gorski, played by Richard Kline, (forever
remembered as the fun-loving Larry of TV’s
“Three’s Company”).
Phil complains about their home — “the
man who built this house must have been
drunk,” he says — and about the neighbors
who no longer take the time to hang
Christmas decorations on their homes.
He sneaks a beer or two in the basement
while Emily, the one who smooths things
over, frets in the kitchen.
Fifteen years before the play’s 1990
setting, they would be Archie and Edith
Bunker. Here, they’re the Gorskis, their
roles just as secure, in performances that
are natural and seamless.
Rusty Ross, last at Penguin in another
Dudzick play, now called “The Miracle of
South Division Street,” is back as the
fast-talking Andy, ready to defend his girl
to the old man.
Rachel Stern makes a fine Penguin debut
as the no-nonsense Randi, who will not budge
under Phil’s relentless questioning of her
atheism, an outlook that runs headlong
against his Baltimore Catechism. Still,
there are cracks in her armor that Stern
nimbly reveals.
Jonathan Fielding is Mickey, the Gorskis’
son with special needs, though — this being
1990 — a less-P.C. word is used.
(Dudzick’s real-life brother, Mike, had
Down syndrome, inspiring not only the
character of Mickey, but also of Georgie
Pazinski in “Over the Tavern,” last year’s
Dudzick offering at Penguin. Mike died in
2009.)
Mickey rocks back and forth,?his
vocabulary limited to “Oh, boy!” and “Wow!”
and “Hiya!”
But something’s not right, not typical,
with Mickey, his mother says.
There’s a plot device that I won’t reveal
here, but suffice it to say this Christmas
won’t be like the others the Gorskis have
celebrated, or like the Hanukkahs that Randi
chose not to celebrate.
Just as with “South Division Street,”
Dudzick masterfully ends the first act with
a cliffhanger, one that sends the Penguin
audience into the intermission with delight.
Critics have sniffed — and likely will
continue to sniff — at Dudzick’s plays as
too earnest, too sentimental and too
sitcom-y, if there’s such a word.
“Greetings!” the play that put Dudzick on
the map, is earnest, sentimental and, yes, a
bit like a sitcom, a first cousin of “All in
the Family.”
But Caruso’s cast fills James J. Fenton’s
lovely set, and Patricia E. Doherty’s period
costumes, with moments that linger — moments
of laughter and heartfelt emotion that make
for a memorable night at the theater.
Sitcom-y?
Perhaps.
But it’s not the end of the world.
“Greetings!” Weekends through June 12. 8
p.m. Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays; 4
p.m. Saturdays; 2 p.m. Sundays. At Penguin
Rep, 7 Crickettown Road, Stony Point.
Mainstage subscriptions — for four plays —
start at $92. Individual tickets are $34,
with discounts for groups of 10 or more and
those 30 and younger. 845-786-2873. Go to
the
Penguin Rep website.
Photo by Andrew M. Horn: The cast of
“Greetings!” at Penguin Rep is, from left:
Richard Kline, Jonathan Fielding, Rusty
Ross, Rachel Stern and Beth Fowler.