The Woolwich Observer

It takes just two to tango … and provide the laughs

Witty repartee and bickering aren’t just for couples in ETC production of Norm Foster’s On a First Name Basis

- FAISAL ALI

HOW MUCH CAN YOU learn about someone in the span of a conversati­on? With two people of vastly different personalit­ies and circumstan­ces, and only a distant familiarit­y between them, what can they hope to discover? Much, as it turns out, with the help of a few tumblers of whiskey to share.

That is the coil that unwinds itself, with all its twists and turns, during the Elmira Theatre Company’s latest production of a Norman Foster caper,

Opening February 2, it’s a show that’s piqued with the wit and deep characteri­zation Foster is known for.

On the surface, the story’s a rather simple one. David Kilbride is a generally odd and self-involved writer of spy novels. His housekeepe­r of 28 years, the sardonic and sharp-tongued Lucy Hopperstaa­d, is preparing to retire for the night, when he detains her at the door with a request.

He realizes, with some amazement, that after almost three decades spent together, he hardly knows a thing about her. In fact, he doesn’t even know the good Ms. Hopperstaa­d’s first name, much to her annoyance. So, to fix the situation, he asks his hapless employee to tell him the story of her life; and in the process hopes to share a secret of his own.

“They stay in one evening and they have a drink together and they find out about each other’s lives, which is really interestin­g because in fact she already knows pretty much everything about his life and he knows nothing about hers,” explains director Rita Huschka.

“And the discoverie­s that they make are by turns funny, sad, poignant, moving, delightful­ly witty – it’s just an all-round lovely play.”

The entirety of the play takes place on a single set, over the course of a single conversati­on between these two characters, David Kilbride and Lucy Hopperstaa­d, played by ETC veterans Gord Cameron and Deb Deckert respective­ly. At its core, the show is a comedy – though a comedy with heart – and the action moves at a surprising­ly brisk pace as the two bicker and banter in a flurry of exchanges.

“It’s almost like a marriage,” said Deb Deckert, who takes on the role of the worldly Lucy Hopperstaa­d. “They’ve been together for 28 years and she just puts up with his idiosyncra­sies because she’s been there for that long.”

Lucy is definitely the down-to-earth character, often playing the foil to David’s flighty behaviour. “I’m nothing if not forthright, sir,” is one of Lucy’s quips, and it’s an apt one.

“She has been with him for 28 years, and she’s been through all of his marriages and all of his novels and the movie versions and everything,” says Huschka. “She is clever herself. She’s not highly educated the way he is – she is moderately educated – but she’s very clever and quick. And she has a great sense of humour and she knows how to deal with him.”

Opposite Deckert is her co-star Gord Cameron, who plays the absent-minded writer.

“Perhaps [he’s] a little socially inept,” said Deckert. “He doesn’t always pick up the social cues that other people would. And my character’s, I don’t know, would you say sarcastica­lly witty, or wittily sarcastic?”

It’s a two-person show, and therein lies both the challenge and the distinct reward of the production. For two hours, Deckert and Cameron have to be able to captivate their audiences in travails of their two personas, and keep the entire show moving.

“It has a lot of inherent challenges, obviously, but on the other side too it gives the audience a lot of time to focus in just on a very specific relationsh­ip and how that might develop over two full acts,” said Cameron.

“Yeah, with just the two of us the challenge is how do you keep your audience engaged for that length of time when there’s only two of you,” added Deckert. “So the pressure is on to be on top of your game. We have to know our lines really, really well, but, luckily for Gord and I, this is not our first time at the rodeo.”

The actors have collaborat­ed on numerous other plays together, but with the action focused squarely on them, the stakes are raised dramatical­ly. That said, the difficulty of performing a two-person show is what drew them to the audition in the first place.

“After you’ve done a number of plays, you look for things that will challenge you. And not just the challenge of the volume of lines, which is certainly there, but the challenge of keeping a play afloat with just two people,” said Cameron.

Buoying the play along is the rich dialogue, the compelling story, deep themes that they say will resonate with their fans.

“I think that it’s very, very appealing,” said Huschka. “Particular­ly to our audiences who are mostly over 40, because part of the discussion during the play is about what we leave behind. And I think that becomes more and more important and interestin­g to all of us as we get older. What are we going to leave behind when we’re gone?”

It’s also apropos of the season, noted Deckert: “With Valentine’s coming up, I mean it is a love story. Maybe not hearts and flowers but it is essentiall­y a love story with all the ups and downs. And yes we get cross with each other and we forgive each other, but it is essentiall­y yes.”

The Elmira Theatre Company production of On a First Name Basis runs February 2-17 at the group’s 76 Howard Ave. venue. Tickets are available at the Centre in the Square box office in Kitchener by calling 519-578-1570 or 1-800265-8977, online at www. centre-square.com or www. elmirathea­tre.com.

The company will also be taking the play on the road as its entry to this year’s Western Ontario Drama League Festival in Sarnia.

 ?? [FAISAL ALI / THE OBSERVER] ?? ETC veterans Deb Deckert and Gord Cameron take on the roles of Lucy Hopperstaa­d and David Kilbride in the upcoming production of Norm Foster’s On a First Name Basis.
[FAISAL ALI / THE OBSERVER] ETC veterans Deb Deckert and Gord Cameron take on the roles of Lucy Hopperstaa­d and David Kilbride in the upcoming production of Norm Foster’s On a First Name Basis.
 ?? [FAISAL ALI / THE OBSERVER] ?? On a First Name Basis will be running at ETC’s Elmira venue February 2-17.
[FAISAL ALI / THE OBSERVER] On a First Name Basis will be running at ETC’s Elmira venue February 2-17.

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