Onstage Atlantaâs production of All in the Timing (Feb. 22-March 22) consists of nine short plays by witty playwright David Ives. Ives specializes in ingenious wordplay and head-spinning gimmicks, but I canât tell you which ones youâll see on a given night at Onstage Atlanta, because they donât know.
The cast has learned the following pieces: âSure Thing,â âWords Words Words,â âVariations on the Death of Trotsky,â âSingular Kinda Guy,â âThe Philadelphia,â âEnglish Made Simple,â âDegas, C'est Moi,â âTime Fliesâ and Ivesâ Preface from his collection of All in the Timing. In an Ives-like touch, the cast will perform seven of the nine plays chosen at random for each performance. âWords Words Wordsâ depicts three monkeys at typewriters, all trying to write Hamlet, while âTime Fliesâ depicts the courtship of two mayflies who realize they only live for 24 hours.
Onstage will not be serving some of the shorts that Atlanta theater fans may remember from Horizon Theatreâs earlier productions of All in the Timing and other Ives evenings of short plays (all of which featured Atlanta's delightful Lala Cochran). I vividly recall Horizon taking on âThe Universal Language,â which features a pun-based lingo that translates âExcuse meâ as âSqueegeeâ and âEnglishâ as âJohnCleese.â And one of the funniest and most unforgettable things Iâve ever seen on a stage anywhere was Horizonâs madcap take on âPhilip Glass Buys a Loaf of Bread.â Ives somehow comes up with a verbal, a capella equivalent to Glassâ trademark, repetition-based musical compositions. In this YouTube clip, Jocular Theatre of Barcelona stages the work in a way that feels more avant-garde and less zany, but gives you a feel for it. Again, donât look for this one at Onstage, though:
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