The Oklahoman

‘37 Postcards’ is a theatrical treat from Jewel Box

- [PHOTO BY JIM BECKEL, THE OKLAHOMAN]

When tragedy happens wouldn’t it be wonderful to hide away, pretending it didn’t happen? Impossible? Or, maybe just impossibly funny.

Playwright Michael McKeever certainly makes it work in “37 Postcards,” one of his most popular comedies. Director Don Taylor also surely brings to this production of “37 Postcards” intelligen­t casting and comic sensibilit­y. When the cast has timing, they have a hit.

Taylor assembles a group of actors able to create a space to believe for just a few hours, that it is possible to make the world go away. All that is left is the laughter and love of a family that is eccentric beyond comprehens­ion. And that’s what Avery Sutton finds when he returns to his lovely but slightly skewed home in an upscale neighborho­od of Darien, Connecticu­t.

Avery has been touring Europe for nearly a decade and has returned with his lady love, Gillian. Gillian is well aware that it is just as easy to fall in love with a rich man as it is to fall in love with a poor fellow, so she fell in love with Avery. Surely the Sutton family isn’t so eccentric that she can’t cope!

Dakota Lee Bryant is Avery Sutton. His performanc­e is a little too frenetic initially; giving him fewer opportunit­ies to advance the humor but his timing is fine-tuned doubling the hilarity. Christine Jolly is the lovely, not yet matronly, lady of the house, Evelyn Sutton. Her natural delivery and normal facade seduces us into believing she may be the sane one in the family. She ultimately reveals her disintegra­tion with grace and wit that surprises and endears, as well as amuses. “37 Postcards”

Jewel Box Theatre, 3700 N. Walker

8 p.m. Thursdays-Saturdays and 2:30 p.m. Sundays through Feb. 12

www.jewelbox. org or 521-1786.

Carol McDonald is the wonderfull­y loving amateur chef and favorite Aunt Ester. Her common sense has always been a cornerston­e for Avery and she reveals the quirkiness of any woman of uncertain age with perfect aplomb. Doug Monson is Stanford P. Sutton. Distinguis­hed, wise and charming in all circumstan­ces. He will never be rattled in the least, and even if his house should fall into a pit he would not forget to be a gracious gentleman.

Allyson Rose is Gillian, beautiful but with a hard edge that might be softened with enough charge cards. Jackie Smola is quite funny as Nana, who has earned the right to irascibili­ty. She’s a real character and her cantankero­usness holds the seeds of the Sutton family strength and humor. They are as delighted as we are realizing that she is merely deaf, not dead.

Avery and the family learn that they can love together and they can stay together, but they must laugh together because every single one of them sees life through the portal of laughter rather than the veil of tears. Patrons who take the time to immerse themselves in this wonderful comic release will find that as the Sutton house settles into earth, they shall be sent into paroxysms of mirth.

Don Taylor’s direction is the glue that makes these characters so funny and Richard Howell’s set design is the build with the zany tilt and tumble. The entire crew brings “37 Postcards” into the hit category backing up this talented cast including one adorable if drasticall­y devilish puppy called Skippy.

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