Rose Byrne, Kelli OHara offer hilarity in…
film review
Fallen Angels
One hour and half-hour with no intermission. At the Todd Haimes Theatre, 227 W. forty second Street.
There’s not a lot more to “Fallen Angels,” Noël Coward’s rice-paper-thin 1925 comedy, than two sex-crazed ladies getting wasted.
That temporary synopsis alone in all probability just despatched a bunch of you racing to the box workplace web site.
But then there are the 2 marvelously matched actresses taking part in the Olympian lushes in the revival that opened Sunday at the Todd Haimes Theatre: Oscar nominee Rose Byrne and Tony Award winner Kelli O’Hara.
The recreation pair start as the image of Coward girls, for whom humor is usually delivered from the neck up. But they soon drunkenly devolve into a flailing and maniacal Edina and Patsy from the Brit-com “Absolutely Fabulous,” falling over armchairs and crawling on the carpet of a attractive London residence in silky robes while pounding Champagne.
Oscar nominee Rose Byrne and Tony Award winner Kelli O’Hara star in Noël Coward’s “Fallen Angels” revival. Joan Marcus
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They drink, they smoke, they scream, they tumble. They’re wives gone wild.
That riot of a second scene of the playlet, one of the “Private Lives” author’s early, lesser efforts, is scrumptious and lowers the viewers’s shoulders after a very shaky start of oversold jokes and ear-drum-piercing British accents that run the gamut.
The alcohol-fueled hilarity and enjoyable aren’t actually the outcome of something Coward wrote though — there’s only a drizzle of wit to be discovered right here — but because Byrne and O’Hara are largely left to their own insane devices.
The closest that one comes to going toe to toe with O’Hara and Byrne is Tracee Chimo as Julia’s maid Saunders. Joan Marcus
Of course, every social gathering kicks off with the awkward “How about this weather?”s and ends the next morning with a raging hangover. “Fallen Angels” is way the same — the center is splendid and then there’s the remaining.
What has pushed these determined ladies to the bottle? Byrne performs Jane and O’Hara is Julia, a pair of unhappily married mates whose seven-year itch has them scratching 24/7. Their husbands Willy (Christopher Fitzgerald) and Fred (Aasif Mandvi) are stiff bores and the home drudgery has grown suffocating.
Then — bonjour! — the duo learns that an previous French flame they both had flings with back in the day named Maurice Duclos (Mark Consuelos) is coming to city. On the night time he’s supposed to stop by, the women have dinner and down a entire winery’s provide of booze in nervousness and then animalistic frustration.
Forget binge-watching, this is watch binging.
Byrne and O’Hara play two “sex-crazed women” getting wasted, delivering a riotous, drunken efficiency. Joan Marcus
Byrne, whose hair toward the end may’ve been styled by the Bride of Frankenstein, excels in roles that have an outwardly excellent particular person epically collapse. See: “Bridesmaids,” “Neighbors” and “If I Had Legs I’d Kick You.” Actually, “If I had legs, I’d kick you!” feels like a line her sloshed Jane would yell. Physically, Byrne performs the half prefer it’s a fashionable Hollywood comedy and walks away with most of the laughs.
O’Hara also has a knack for put-together sorts, like Anna in “The King and I” or Nellie Forbush in “South Pacific.” But, exterior of some surprising romance, those basic musical sopranos typically keep upright. Watching such a fine-china actress as O’Hara shatter on the ground, sliding down designer David Rockwell’s grand staircase and crudely spitting out sweets, is a hoot.
Oh, proper! There are 4 other people in this play.
The closest that one comes to going toe to toe with O’Hara and Byrne is Tracee Chimo as Julia’s maid Saunders. The character is a one-gag amusement. The gist is that Saunders has an surprising wealth of life expertise for a housekeeper and continuously interjects. A “yes, ma’am!” chipper Chimo is okay, but the bit wears skinny.
The husbands, performed by Christopher Fitzgerald and Aasif Mandvi, are “stiff bores” who drag down the play. Joan Marcus
And neither of the actors taking part in the cuckolded males is any good. It’s simple to dismiss them as pointless passengers in a two-star vehicle, but they actually do drag down the play.
An overarching downside of director Scott Ellis’ manufacturing is its makes an attempt to spin every second into comedian gold fairly clunkily, when actors must be zipping through the setup. The hubbys are the main offenders, taking their uppercrust puffery to an obnoxious excessive. And because of their cartoonishness, we never imagine they so a lot as live with these ladies, let alone are married to them.
Consuelos arrives fashionably late, and his French brogue is, ahem, sacre bleu!
These guys sure make you need a drink. So, it’s a good factor that when Byrne and O’Hara pop the cork, they glug away Jane and Julia’s issues and, for at least half an hour, ours too.
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