This past Saturday, a friend and I made the pilgrimage to see I Hate Hamlet over
at Ruben’s Café on Blanco road, off Basse in an
area where every shopping center we passed looked exactly the same.
It was my first dinner-theater experience and I was open to anything
that Damian Gillen and The Company Theatre threw at me. I went through
a gamut of emotions—and was rewarded with a cookie during
intermission for my hard work. (Well, actually the people at
Ruben’s offered dessert, so that explains it.)
In a nutshell, Andrew Rally, our anti-hero, is a TV actor that is
offered to play the role of Hamlet in a Shakespeare in the Park
performance. Deidre McDavey, his doting virginal girlfriend, goes crazy
with delight over the possibility of her boyfriend playing a
Shakespearean character actor … Rally not so much, that is
until the ghost of John Barrymore arrives and hilarity ensues.
I had a somewhat love-hate relationship for Daniel Sparks’
character of Andrew. His “Oh, Brother” facial
expressions were a bit stale and unrealistic. He did show range towards
the second act. His character fully developed and instead of being a
money-hungry faded TV- star man-boy he morphed into a once-faded
TV-star man.
Deidre is played awkwardly by Becky Matthews; now let me explain
… to understand Deidre is to understand that she’s
a hopeless romantic, a girl who believes in fairytales, anxiously
waiting for her Prince Charming to whisk her off her feet. Instead,
she’s paired with Andrew, a mediocre mate she adores. Her
awe-shucks appeal may leave some audience members queasy. It could be a
result of overacting— whatever the case it didn’t
fare well with me, but the audience ate it up.
Gallien is flawless in his role as the ghost of Barrymore. His
accent, his presence, his libido are in the spotlight and are
definitely the reason why the show is so well received. I also loved
the immensely low budget props. The Company made the scant space work
with only one setting.
It was an interesting show to check out and it’s always nice
to see small dinner theaters bringing in large crowds (with a string of
sold-out performances, including a packed house the night we attended).
The Company’s Dinnerbox series (which I Hate Hamlet is
part of) has consistently delivered out-of-the-ordinary performances
showcasing Gallien’s superb acting and the group’s
range of comedic talents.
I Hate Hamlet
Dinner 7:15pm
Show 8pm
March 1 (last performance)
$15-25
Ruben’s Café
14357 Blanco Rd.
1-800-838-3006
thecompanytheatre.org/