The Collegian Wednesday, April 4,1990 Matchbox Players The Coarse Acting Show" by Rob Prindle The Coarse Acting Show by Michael Green Wednesday, April 4 - Saturday, April 7. Studio Theatre - 8:00 pm. In the tradition of Monty Python? No, not even close. In fact the only thing that The Coarse Acting Show and Python have in common is English accent. Not everything that weighs the same as a duck is a witch. But it was an enjoyable enough night of comedy theater with a new (at least to me) concept. Coarse acting, as the director explained before the show, is a combination of bad acting, missed cues, faulty props, out of synch dialog and just about any other faux pas that could come about on stage. All of this can be extremely funny, but as you can imagine, all of this chaos on stage can also get tiring. Each actor in the cast had an English Thespian type name (Neville Blanchard, Johnathan Mortimer Swift, etc.) Now this gets a bit complicated. The actors stayed in their thespian characters through five short plays of very NEED EXTRA CASH "SPECIAL FOR NEW DONORS" TIMI^ONLY Learn how to earn an additional $32.00 on top of our already high donor fees Please call for further information and appointment IPILASMA-TEC, LTD, m WIST Bttlh ST, EMU, IP A a FOR. A BIG < Foe&WliOG HO6 ' 1 36T? c—' Other actors worth watching include Bill Gibbard, especially in the experimental piece. Bill is an actor with incredible energy and this is really the only place in the play where he was allowed to use it, although he played well throughout the evening. Clay Robeson and Tammy Furyesz both performed well with what I thought was ailing material. And although this play did have many high points, there were also some flaws. Some of the actors, it was clear, did not understand the humor that they were trying to create. The play went way, way, way, way, way 100 long at two and a half hours. It started to lose the audience, and how many times is a falling wall funny? The introductions between plays didn't work at all. The smoke machine almost killed several elderly members of the audience and I didn't understand one important point. Were the plays within the play supposed to be serious or is part of coarse acting also coarse writing? This play was a tremendous undertaking and the kind of experimentation that college theater needs, but I still have one question. How did the players team all of that sniff? fggii Page 7