Hay Fever by Noel Coward

Hay Fever by Noel Coward
Genesian Theatre, 420 Kent Street, Sydney until August 8, 2009

The Genesian Theatre Company's revival of Noel Coward's classic 1925 comedy, Hay Fever, takes us into the madcap world of the eccentric Bliss family, in a production directed by Genesian stalwart Nanette Frew.
The play is set at the start of a summer weekend in the Thames-side home of popular novelist David Bliss (Timothy Bennett). The novelist shares his home with his actress wife, Judith (Hilary Miller) and their two grown up children, Simon (Michael Sutherland) and Sorel (Marisa-Clare Berzins). Plans for an enjoyable weekend are thrown into jeopardy when it emerges that unbeknownst to the others, each has invited a special guest up for the weekend. Before anything can be changed, the first guest, Sorel's guest, Richard (Jordan Watt) arrives at the door.
Nanette Frew's production serves Coward's satirical comedy well, communicating the get the guest’s mentality of the Bliss family as they created havoc, that is, until the guests got to have the last laugh. There were some fine performances. Hilary Miller, a graduate of the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama, was great in her high energy comic portrayal of Judith as the quintessential drama queen and control freak. University of New England drama graduate Melanie Robinson was strong in her portrayal of the bitchy, deadpan Myra Arundel who had no time for Simon Bliss's good natured flirting.
Debbie Smith's fine set of the Bliss's french provincial style living room featuring a white piano, and with doors leading to a garden and library worked well. As did Susan Carveth's costumes, especially a glittering chintz gown that Hilary Miller as Judith paraded around the stage.
David Kary

 

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