Jason Morton - Nicky Lyn Hunter -Rina Onorato |
“Daylight Saving” by Nick Enright
Director: Michael Weston
Set Design: Bill Kolentsis and Michael Weston
Tempo Theatre
Belconnen Theatre until May 24th.
Reviewed by Bill Stephens
The selection of Nick Enright’s delightful romp, “Daylight
Saving”, is a great choice for Tempo Theatre to celebrate their fortieth year
of presenting community theatre in Canberra.
Written by Enright in 1989, “Daylight Saving” offers six
meaty roles, with situations which remain funny and believable. The plot
revolves around a successful restaurateur, Felicity, (Rina Onorato), who’s getting
bored with her marriage to her busy jet-setting sports-manager husband, Tom
(Bill Kolentsis). While Tom is on one of his many overseas trips Felicity is
contacted by Joshua (Jason Morton), an old flame from her exchange student days
in the USA. Left alone on her wedding anniversary, Felicity decides to set up a
romantic candle-lit dinner with Joshua, to relive old times, and just maybe,
rekindle something of their old romance.
Predictably and hilariously, her plans go awry when her
preparations for the lobster dinner are constantly interrupted by phone calls
from her restaurant, where her maître d’ is engaged in a pitched battle with
the cook. Her inquisitive, over-bearing mother, Bunty (Joan White), arrives
unexpectedly, about the same time as her distraught, thoughtless neighbour
Stephanie (Nicky Lyn Hunter), promptly invites herself to the dinner.
On opening night, first night nerves robbed the first act of
the necessary pace and precision. Rina Onorato and Bill Kolentsis, as Felicity
and Tom, struggled to establish some rhythm to their performances, and as a
result, many of their best lines missed their laughs. However in the second
act, once Tom’s self-absorbed protégé, champion tennis player, Jason (a nicely
sustained and very funny performance from John Brennan) arrived on the scene,
the pace picked up and the laughs came thick and fast.
All the action in the play takes place in the large family
room of Felicity and Tom’s house in Pittwater, on the Northern beaches of
Sydney. The nicely detailed set design with its water views, ceiling possums,
comfortable furniture and period technology, reflected this well. Jordan
Renneberg’s well-managed sound effects and lighting design also contributed to
the success of this entertaining example of Tempo Theatre’s welcome and
sustained contribution to Canberra’s theatrical milieu.
Jason Morton - Rina Onorato - Bill Kolentsis |
Photos supplied by Tempo Theatre