Fuddy Meers presents a few problems in the script that need to be addressed. They are few but diverse. The show opens in Claire’s bedroom. Then we move to Limping man’s car. Then to Gertie’s kitchen. Then to Gertie’s basement. Then to Richard’s car. There are two different cars as setting! Another issue is the staged violence. There is a tussle between Richard and Heidi when he wrestles her gun from her using his self defense class knowledge. Later there is the struggle between Heidi and Kenny when she is trying to get the gun back from him. On top of that Kenny is shot in this process. And there is the fact that there is a gun on stage. Then there is the stabbing. Gertie stabs Limping man in the back. And to top off the staged violence, both Heidi and Millet are conked on the back of the head with a shovel. Lastly there is the problem of the two speech impediments that Gertie (aphasia) and Limping man (lisping) to consider. They make it hard for the audience to understand if not done properly.
Here at SHSU, however, we have more specified concerns. First of all I see Fuddy Meers as a show that would be in the showcase theatre. Assuming that this was the case, the size of the space right away sends bells off at the thought of the two cars that are settings. Not to mention the kitchen, the basement, or the bedroom that. Then there is the question of violence. The staged combat can be dangerous for professionals and we want students to be as safe as possible. Something else to think about with the small space is the audience’s close proximity to this action. This means that the wrestling, gun use, and stabbing have to be believable on top of the safety concerns. One plus with the small space is that the language issues are easier to handle. The easier it is to see an actors lips the easier it is to understand what they are saying. So, therefore, in the case of Limping man and his lisp, there is some relief to the concern of the ear picking up what is being said.
There were a few interesting solutions to the set that I read in reviews or saw in the production photos. More than one production had a revolving set, sort of like a Lazy Susanne, as an answer to the different sets. But most treated the sets and props as abstracts without walls. I saw one picture that had an actual car on stage…Or at least part of it (the front end) although I’m not sure if this production used the same car as both sets or if they used two different car fronts. Another way the cars were solved in a few of the productions was that the seats and steering wheel only as the car. One solution that I saw that did not work for me was the production that used a Fisher Price toy car! HUH?! There didn’t seem to be much said about the violence and or stabbing mentioned in my research. I saw one photo that had what looked like a large butcher knife being used. In another photo from the same production they seemed to be using depth as a way to fool the audience in sewing up Limping man’s wounds. One would assume that they used angles to have the stabbing work or a collapsible knife. To address the gun, I think that this was something that some of the smaller productions treated as part of the audience’s willing suspense of disbelief. I saw one photo that had Heidi and Kenny fighting over a more than obviously fake gun. Further more, none of the reviews addressed problems with the speech impediments that the characters have. I don’t know if this is due to a very well rehearsed set of actors or a translation sheet of Gertie’s lines slipped into the program. Every review I read seemed to understand her completely.
In the majority of the reviews that I read, the script was hailed as hilariously funny and spot on for this type of comedy and the productions nailed the performance. There were, however, mixed reviews in Europe. The professional English productions had some reviews that didn’t enjoy the outrageous comedy that switched into the moral lesion with a thoughtful, poignant even, ending. The critic that I am thinking of in particular that I’m thinking of ( and most like it about the same production) blamed part of the problem on the playwright and part on the director. Apparently there is a fine line that is easy to cross put forth by the playwright and the English production crossed it.
Thursday, July 30, 2009
Australian Premiere 2005

Fishy Productions
The Darlinghurst Theatre Company
The Darlinghurst Theatre
Sydney Australia
May 2005
Directed by: Morgan Smallbone
Set Design: Hamish Peters
Costume Design: Alexandra Gallery
Lighting/ Sound Design: Glenn Dulihanty
Photography: Cameron Baird/ Criena Court
Graphic Design: Sensory Creative
The humour is universal and the various American accents only enhance the comedic elements. The set is basic but functional and makes the most of the space available, with a rather ingenious solution to staging scenes in a car.The play is rather Altman-esque (as in Robert Altman, the film director) in structure. There are many story strands woven together and as we get to know the characters, we discover where their stories intersect. In this way Claire’s journey is also the audience’s voyage of discovery. The audience is experiencing everything for the very first time – just like Claire.
Phillipa Wherett, theblurb.com
European Premiere 2004

Birmingham Repertory Theatre & Arts Theatre, London
Birmingham & London England
April to June 2004
Director: Angus Jackson
Designer: Lez Brotherston
Lighting Designer: Neil Austin
Music and Sound: Alex Gallafent
Dialect Coach: Penny Dyer
Fight Direction: Terry King
London Costume Supervisor: Dianne Williams
Assistant Designer: Colin Falconer
By stark contrast, Fuddy Meers brings us a major new American talent, though I wish the writer, David Lindsay-Abaire could have decided whether he was writing a heart-breaking tragi-comedy about amnesia or a manic farce. So in 90 short minutes we get both, often hopelessly jumbled. True, amnesia is a dodgy subject, especially for those of us getting a little absent-minded.
Sheridan Morley, Daily Express
The director, Angus Jackson, seems unable to decide whether we are meant to care about these dysfunctional characters, or regard them merely as comic cartoons, so he tries to have it both ways and falls flat on his face.
Charles Spenser, The Daily Telegraph
VBC Playhouse 2005

VBC Playhouse
Theatre Hunstville
Huntsville AL
January 2005
Director: Sam Marsh
Technical Director: Mark Eccleston and Karl King
Stage Manager: David French
Costumes: Special Assistance from Anne Clem
Set Design: David Harwell
Set Dressing: Heather Huber
Props: Breanne Wise
Make-up: Lydia Marsh
Prosthetic Make-up: Rick Coleman
Casting Committee: Sam Marsh, Michelle Allen, Jim Zielinski, Breanne Wise
Director Sam Marsh says in his "Notes From the Director" that his philosophy of directing is to "cast well and then stay out of the way." Whatever his formula, it seems to be working! This show is cast extremely well. Each actor has created a unique personality for the play.
Marsh also explains what he thinks the show is about (because you might be a little confused if you don't understand this): "To me, it's a little story about how looks can be deceiving, about how we shouldn't judge a book by its cover, about how little we really know each other--you know, all the little cliches."
Jean Brandau, About.com
The Colony Theatre 2003

The Colony Theatre Company
Burbank CA
Through March 2003
Director: David Rose
Scenic Design: Robert L. Smith
Lighting Design: Lisa D. Katz
Sound Design: Drew Dalzell
Costume Design: A. Jeffrey Schoenberg
Properties Design: MacAndMe
Make-up Design: Bradley M. Look
Fight Choreography: Charles Currier
Assistant Director: Anjali Bal
The second act is not as funny as the first. Rather than end the show on a comic high, Lindsay-Abaire has chosen to go for a more serious, if not downright touching, ending. The company executes it well enough - when we're supposed to take a moment and think about how really awful it must be for someone suffering from amnesia and the people who must cope with it, we do feel for them. The problem is that we'd rather not. Having spent two hours laughing at these characters, it is a bit of a downer to actually have to take them seriously.
Sharon Perlmutter, Talkinbroadway.com
Although Rose scores in leading this talented crew through a comedic minefield, when it becomes time to deal with the realities behind each character they have to travel too far to adequately register the reality of a prevalent social ill. Partly it is the writing that trivializes the problem. However, the actors have worked so hard to elicit laughter that their descent into recognition feels rushed.[separate interesting thought] An imaginative and versatile set by Robert L. Smith allows the proceedings to unfold cinematically without sacrificing the flow of action. Lisa D. Katz's lighting serves well, but the scenes in the car are not as tightly lighted as they might be. Costuming by A. Jeffrey Schoenberg also serves the interpretation.
Leigh Kennicott, Back Stage West
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
City Theatre 2002

City Theatre
Pittsburgh PA
March 2002
Director: Lou Jacob
Set Designer: G.W. Mercier
Lighting Desiner: Andrew David Ostrowski
Some of people in her life would rather hide than reveal the facts of who they are and what parts they play in Claire's life, so each revelation has a less than 100% chance of being disproved later in the play. This tenuousness plus the eccentric nature of the characters is the crux of the comedy in Fuddy Meers. In this production, it works only part of the time.
Ann Miner, Talkinbroadway.com
The setting is a blue, cloudscape box by G.W. Mercier, which Andrew David Ostrowski's lights can spangle with stars or saturate with Norman Rockwell warmth. Necessary set pieces (furniture, car) whizz in and out between scenes, with the shadowy crew seeming like the stage-managering part of Claire's Wonderland dream.
Christopher Rawson, Post-Gazette
Monday, July 27, 2009
2nd Story Theatre 2008

2nd Story Theatre
Warren, RI
May through June 2008
Director:Ed Shea
Set Designer:Trevor Elliot
Humanities Scholar-in-Residence:Dr. Eileen Warburton
There is a cop (Amy Thompson) chase involving Claire's husband and son, as they go looking for her. There are mistaken identities and mayhem. It is all completely improbable and beyond absurd but very entertaining.
Randy Rice, Broadwayworld.com
http://broadwayworld.com/article/Review_Fuddy_Meers_at_2nd_Story_Theater_20080518
Trevor Elliot has come up with the attractive revolving set for the show, one that switches from Claire’s stark bedroom with blue sky and puffy clouds, to Gertie’s 1950s kitchen, her musty basement and the front seat of Richard’s car.
Warren, RI
May through June 2008
Director:Ed Shea
Set Designer:Trevor Elliot
Humanities Scholar-in-Residence:Dr. Eileen Warburton
There is a cop (Amy Thompson) chase involving Claire's husband and son, as they go looking for her. There are mistaken identities and mayhem. It is all completely improbable and beyond absurd but very entertaining.
Randy Rice, Broadwayworld.com
http://broadwayworld.com/article/Review_Fuddy_Meers_at_2nd_Story_Theater_20080518
Trevor Elliot has come up with the attractive revolving set for the show, one that switches from Claire’s stark bedroom with blue sky and puffy clouds, to Gertie’s 1950s kitchen, her musty basement and the front seat of Richard’s car.
Channing Gray, Providence Journal http://www.2ndstorytheatre.com/season2007/fm.press.html
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