During the Christmases of my childhood, I always enjoyed advent calendars and the daily ritual of opening a little door to reveal a new surprise for each day of December until the 25th. Taking the advent calendar as inspiration, this month I'll offer some tongue-in-cheek holiday blog entries, with the idea that clicking on, say, embedded video or "For the rest of this entry" lines are the online equivalent to opening a cardboard calendar window. First up is Invasion: Christmas Carol at Dad's Garage, which is the only version of the Scrooge story where you may hear a word like "bacne." Or "turduckephant."
The Christmas Carol satire rejiggers the invasion concept the theater used in last years Invasion: Our Town. Both shows turn a theatrical classic upside down by the addition of a mid-show invader whos not only new to the text, but hasnt been seen by the rest of the cast, who have to incorporate the visitor on the fly. Dads likes to draft current or defunct roles from its long-running improvised soap opera Scandal! as the invader, and on Christmas Carols opening night Scott Warren played the Ghost of Christmas Past as a blustering barbarian in a loin clout. The nightly invader, isnt the most surprising aspect of Invasion, however, but the casting of Ebenezer Scrooge himself. Ill put the detail behind the cut to avoid spoilers, although the end of Dads trailer for the show gives it away:
Amber Nash cross-dresses as Scrooge and brings a fresh perspective on an overly familiar role. With her make-up, muttonchops and permanent scowl, she has something of a Dr. Zaius look about her. She gives Scrooge a delightfully bitchy energy, so its a shame that much of the show inevitably makes Scrooge passive and regretful.
Invasion: Christmas Carol features many built-in opportunities for improv games, and at times the actors deliberately mess with each other to funny effect. Nash, for instance, can control the duration of the Christmas Present scenes we see, and can require frantic quick-changes from the actors playing multiple roles. The actors dont know where Scrooges childhood scenes take place, and on opening night we discover that Scrooge worked with his first employer Fezziwig at Myrtle Beach.
Where Invasion: Our Town felt like a more structured parody of Thornton Wilders venerable text, Invasion: Christmas Carol is so loose and frivolous, at times it seems like the wheels will come off completely. Plus, even when the show features a funny invader, like Warrens barbarian, the shows still stuck with the role for the duration, even if he overstays his welcome. Fortunately the Scrooge story is so familiar and the actors nimble enough that the story survives, even through youre less likely to hear Bah, humbug! than an epithet like By the leathery nipple of Hera!
Invasion: Christmas Carol. Through Dec. 23. Dads Garage Theatre, 280 Elizabeth St. Thu.-Sat., 8 p.m. $12-$22. 404-523-3141. www.dadsgarage.com
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