Sunday, March 16, 2008

Charlie Brown Gets Lucky

We went to Dog Sees God: Confessions of a Teenage Blockhead last night at the Oakland. It was our first full show at the Oakland, though we had been to a Stage and First Night there. The show follows the Peanuts gang ten years after we last knew them from the comic strip. Snoopy has to be put to sleep after being found with Woodstock in his jaws; Lucy loses her psychiatric touch and instead ends up in a psychiatric ward; and Pigpen has internalized his dirty ugliness and become a full-bodied homophobic germ.

I recommend going to see the show. We had fun, and there was lots to talk about afterwards (at Rosetta Stone, where we ate and drank until 1:45am), which I think is one of the points of going out to the theater. Plus, local theater is one of Youngstown's great assets. The sets are wonderful, the music sets a good tone, and the actors themselves were solid and, it seemed, delivered most everything that was asked of them.

However, the production and the play itself both have some regrettable flaws. Firstly, the "dog sees god" premise suggests deep philosophical musings on death and religion that are merely attempted by asking Van (think Linus) about Buddhism, by querying CB's sister (think Sally) on her flavor-of-the-week religion, Wiccanism, and by CB (Charlie Brown, if you haven't gotten it yet) delivering a brief monologue to Beethoven (think Schroeder) which the latter ignores. Dog-sees-god as a concept is really more of a conceit to propel the gang forward in time so they can drink, smoke weed, say "fuck," and discover their sexuality. This is fine; I understand that: we get some characters with which we're familiar, and we get to see them respond to a different set of situations. This leads us to our second problem.

Who the hell are these people? The fact that it's an unauthorized adaptation means you can't come right out and call Linus "Linus" or Sally "Sally," so I spent the first fifteen minutes of the show, if not more, trying to figure out who everybody was. And in the second act, when we finally meet Van's Sister (think Lucy) in the psych ward, I wasn't actually sure that CB's sister hadn't become committed and I had missed the plot line, because the actors appeared similar to me, and there just wasn't much effort to distinguish them physically.

So, let's talk about what really worked? The message that came through was sticking up for those who needed defense, and I thought Greg Mocker was outstanding. I couldn't watch anyone else when he was on stage. Well, okay, except for Brooke and Denise, who were their usual gorgeous selves. And the morning-after scene with a semi-clad Brooke was directorial genius!

So, go check out Dog Sees God at the Oakland, because it's entertaining and thought-provoking, not to mention arousing, adult entertainment (no, not that kind of adult entertainment, though you will see men kiss). And bring cash, because they don't take MasterCard, or American Express, or Visa.

5 comments:

Lucy said...

My husband I were at the same show. There was plenty of use of the work "fuck" for sure, but the acting was top notch. I agree that Beethoven's character was strong. It took me less time to figure out who was who, but I'm a little bit of a peanuts nerd.

I enjoyed reading your review.

Tyler said...

Not that I have anything against "fuck", mind you! I probably should have boned up on my Peanuts gang before I went.

Janko said...

Wow. I forget, did I tell you my thoughts on the show? We align exactly except I recognized all the characters pretty quickly.

But I did like calling the characters by their "close" names and not their "exact" names. It was like a small puzzle to figure out.

Beethoven's character stole the show in terms of acting performance - by far. His timing and voice was perfect.

With some of the actors I felt like their tempo was off - like they were rushing through their lines. It then felt inauthentic, which made me bored at times.

However, I recommend the show to others and would pay to see it again - this time bringing cash.

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The Stage said...

yes yes, i know we swear a lot...but it's part of the shock value that sets up the show's humor...and pathos ;)

thanks for your support, and thanks to all the readers who came or may still come check out the show. we run tonight, friday, and saturday and next fri. and sat all at 8 pm.

p.s. names have been changed to protect the playwright from getting sued by the p-nuts estate...they're real sticklers about licensure and rights. just ask rochelle, who used to work for them!