Zebra Misc
Trending

Little Theatre of Alexandria’s “Wait Until Dark” is Chilling Entertainment

Brendan Quinn (Mike), Adam Adkins (Roat), and Brendan Chaney (Carlino) in Little Theatre of Alexandria’s “Wait Until Dark”. Photo by Matthew Randall. Photo by Matthew Randall.
Brendan Quinn (Mike), Adam Adkins (Roat), and Brendan Chaney (Carlino) in Little Theatre of Alexandria’s “Wait Until Dark”. Photo by Matthew Randall. Photo by Matthew Randall.

ALEXANDRIA, VA – If you are interested in a bit of classic theatre, head straight over to Little Theatre of Alexandria for a new production, Wait Until Dark, which is edgy and provocative, and sometimes head scratchingly obtuse, but with a shocking well-staged ending that you won’t see coming. Of course, you may have seen the 1968 film version (starring Audrey Hepburn) of the stage play that ran for 373 performances on Broadway in 1966, but this refresher production live and onstage in your neighborhood will make you glad to have access to live theatre again!

Here’s the plot as described in the program notes by Heather Benjamin, the production’s director, who made the most of this engaging, but sometimes confusing material. “Frederick Knott’s play begins by introducing three con men—Roat (Adam R. Adkins), Mike (Brendan Quinn), and Carlino (Brendan Chaney)—who are in search of a doll containing illegal drugs. They set a trap for Susy (Mel Gumina), the heroine we do not meet until the very end of the first scene. It turns out that a year earlier, Susy lost her sight in an accident, and just six months later, she married Sam (Ryan Washington), a photographer.”

Mel Gumina (Susy) and Julia Stimson (Gloria). Photo by Matthew Randall.
Mel Gumina (Susy) and Julia Stimson (Gloria). Photo by Matthew Randall.

Other cast members you will meet are Gloria (Julia Stimson on the night I saw the play, and Juliet Strom on alternate nights), the young upstairs neighbor, who bedevils Susy by moving furniture around and lying about other matters that are integral to the plot. Susy’s husband, Sam, (well-played by Ryan Washington) seems totally bereft of empathy for his handicapped wife and as such, just seems annoying and overbearing. I found it strange that these two would actually fall in love and marry! (But that’s just me!) Two more cast members are the Policemen played by Bill Gery and Michael Townsend.

Mel Gumina (Susy). Photo by Matthew Randall.
Mel Gumina (Susy). Photo by Matthew Randall.

If you saw the 1968 movie, Wait Until Dark, with the amazing Audrey Hepburn, Mel Gumina, who truly carries the show, looks very much like a young, beautiful Audrey Hepburn and keeps the play moving and fascinating. For me, evoking Hepburn is a big plus, but even better, she can act! Her scenes where the con men have crept into her basement apartment, (designed by Julie Fischer) are gripping.

That apartment set, by the way, looks exactly like my idea of a 1966 basic Greenwich Village basement apartment with a set of stairs leading down to the living area and high basement windows with venetian blinds and a view of the street. The furniture is shabby chic mid-century vintage. A little disturbingly, there is a front door that is mostly left open, even though there is a blind person living in the apartment. Also, a little odd for me (I was living in New York in 1966), they have a washing machine. Wow! Most people in luxury apartments STILL don’t have washing machines in New York city! But I’m willing to suspend my judgement on that for now…

Mel Gumina (Susy) and Ryan Washington (Sam). Photo by Matthew Randall.
Mel Gumina (Susy) and Ryan Washington (Sam). Photo by Matthew Randall.

Mel behaves very much like you would expect a blind person to act—stumbling over furniture which gets moved out of place and accurately showing some confusion, but keeping her cool until the plot to find the doll heats up through the machinations of the three con artists. Those guys are seemingly “stooges” who (it appears to me), should easily see through the roadblocks set up by the “mastermind” of the three (smarmily played by Adam R. Adkins). Just sayin’. The young girl, Gloria, is integral to the plot and, as beautifully played by Julia, is by turns mean and irritating, then, when the plot to locate the doll gets really serious and life-threatening, well—I’m not going to give that away. I will tell you that the fight choreographer Stefan Sittig’s handling of one of the final scenes will send chills down your spine. Enjoy the show!

Ticket and Covid 19 Information: Wait Until Dark runs through 11/6/21 at Little Theatre of Alexandria, 600 Wolfe Street, Alexandria, VA. For tickets, call 703-683-0496 or go online at www.thelittletheatre.com. Masks covering the nose and chin are required for the entire performance. Also required is proof of Covid-19 vaccination or a recent negative test taken within 72 hours before arrival at the theatre.

More Local Theatre: Hurry to See ‘My Lord, What a Night’ at Ford’s Theatre Running Through October 24

 

Sara Dudley Brown

Sara Dudley Brown is the Theatre Editor of The Zebra Press. She graduated with a music degree in voice from Rollins College Conservatory of Music in Winter Park Florida. After several years of professional singing and acting (Disney World and The Kenley Theatres as well as voice-over and film here in the DMV area), trying and failing miserably at being Barbra Streisand (the post was already filled), Sara decided to take her lifelong love of music and the theatre to create a profession which would use everything she had learned theatrically and musically over the years—corporate event production and management. She began with department store events, working for the May Company putting on events in 18 stores, and went on to found her own corporate event management company. She recently retired after 30 years of mounting mega events internationally and domestically for some of the world’s top aviation manufacturers. Now Sara is once again using her years of theatrical work as well as her musical training to review Metro Area professional theatre productions for The Zebra Press. She thinks this is a much more sane way to live and never tires of the excitement of a theatre opening!

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Back to top button