Ottawa Citizen

Some tightly ordered chaos from the Company of Fools

- PATRICK LANGSTON

Pomme and ‘Restes: Shipwrecke­d! On the Tempestuou­s Lost Island of Never A Great Canadian Theatre Company/A Company of Fools co-production At GCTC Reviewed Thursday

Like its title, the latest, slightly unhinged show by A Company of Fools contains everything but the kitchen sink.

There’s Prospero and Miranda from William Shakespear­e’s The Tempest, as well as that play’s shipwreck and island, that island being the setting for most of this play. Spunky, red-haired Anne magically appears from Green Gables. Ditto Captain Hook from Peter Pan. Puns, visual gags, slapstick humour, and a talking potato and carrot pepper the story.

And, as the title promises, at the centre of it all are those rednosed, trouble-courting clowns Pomme Frites and ‘Restes, the former as imperious as he was when he first appeared in the Fools’ The Danish Play years ago and the latter still as gullible but sweet as when he first clumped into view in the same show. They, together with Prospero and Miranda, were on a cruise ship (don’t ask) when it was swamped in a storm and all four were cast up on the island.

Chaotic? Yes, but also tightly ordered, smartly executed and one of the best things the Fools have done.

Scott Florence (Pomme), Margo MacDonald (’Restes) and AL Connors (director) wrote the show, which was commission­ed by and co-developed with GCTC and is making its world premiere. The script is buoyant and well-honed with lines, characters and events as colourful as John Doucet’s cartoonish (in a good way) island set and Vanessa Imeson’s costumes.

Pierre Brault is Prospero, a fading magician of the showy David Copperfiel­d school whose lines are for the most part taken directly from The Tempest and whose character, at one point veering close to megalomani­a, is the straight man in a comedy.

Katie Ryerson plays both Miranda and Anne, the former desperate to establish her own identity separate from her controllin­g father Prospero and the latter as theatrical­ly imaginativ­e as the original Anne. On second thought, the original Anne looks like a drudge next to this one.

Hook, all insinuatio­n and flamboyanc­e with a magnificen­t mane of curling black hair, is played with wonderful physicalit­y by Jesse Buck, a former member of Cirque du Soleil. Like Ryerson, he’s a familiar face in Fools’ shows.

The cast is consistent­ly excellent, eager to explore the subversion and revel in the sheer fun that is the Fools when they’re at the top of their game. Pomme and ‘Restes are the through line for all this as they attempt to navigate life and their marooned existence on the island. They attempt to control the world — in this case, one of magic, conflict and overthe-top literary figures — and themselves. They shoot from the hip and miss. They squabble and fret. They are us.

Continues until Dec. 14. Tickets: GCTC box office, 613-2365196, gctc.ca

 ?? WAYNE CUDDINGTON/ OTTAWA CITIZEN ?? Scott Florence, left, as Pomme Frites, Margo MacDonald, right, as ‘Restes and Pierre Brault, background, as Prospero star in the GCTC production of Pomme and ’Restes.
WAYNE CUDDINGTON/ OTTAWA CITIZEN Scott Florence, left, as Pomme Frites, Margo MacDonald, right, as ‘Restes and Pierre Brault, background, as Prospero star in the GCTC production of Pomme and ’Restes.

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