Los Angeles Times

A mix of a fairy tale and ‘The ‘Goonies’

Low-tech magic buoys the charming ‘The Old Man and the Old Moon’ at the Wallis.

- By F. Kathleen Foley

“The Old Man and the Old Moon” at the Wallis throws in a little low-tech magic too in fun stage production.

Fairy-tale nuts will get a huge kick out of “The Old Man and the Old Moon,” a PigPen Theatre Company production now in a limited run at the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts in Beverly Hills.

The brainchild of a few Carnegie Mellon freshmen back in 2007, PigPen has performed to considerab­le critical acclaim across the country.

This latest offering is prime stuff, incorporat­ing live music, ingenious puppetry and amazingly innovative low-tech effects into a charming, original fable appropriat­e for most ages. (However, the tinier tots at a recent matinee seemed challenged by the peripateti­c story line and 90minute running time.)

Mingle a Hans Christian Andersen story with “The Goonies” and you get a rough idea of the plot. Since time immemorial, the Old Man (Ryan Melia) has been entrusted with keeping the leaky moon filled with liquid light. But when his wife, the Old Woman (Alex Falberg), goes adventurin­g without him, the Old Man abandons his lunar duty and tenaciousl­y pursues his straying love. By impersonat­ing a former war hero, the Old Man secures a berth on a ship headed to a war zone — but bamboozles his gullible shipmates to change course and follow him westward toward a lost city of light where treasure awaits.

During his adventures, the Old Man braves oceans, deserts — he even lands in the belly of a monstrous fish. (He escapes with the help of a fellow captive who, as we learn, has a mysterious connection to the Old Man’s story.) However, as a result of the Old Man’s derelictio­n, the emptied moon disappears, sparking worldwide chaos.

That’s just a thumbnail of these hectic proceeding­s, which tend toward the overwrough­t (hence those fidgety kiddies). However, there’s so much sheer enchantmen­t in the mix, criticism seems niggling.

Stuart Carden, credited as co-director with the members of PigPen, briskly orchestrat­es the keenly marshaled mayhem. The cast, which includes Matt Nuernberge­r, Dan Weschler, Ben Ferguson, Curtis Gillen and Arya Shahi, doubles as musicians and singers who perform toe-tapping, Gaelicseas­oned music from the company’s debut album. Their combined musiciansh­ip is a highlight, but the music is just the tip of their onstage responsibi­lities. All perform a dizzying array of roles: actors, puppeteers, prop masters, lighting specialist­s, Foley artists.

Lydia Fine, who designed the set and costumes, deserves high praise for her puppet design, as does Mikhail Fiksel for his integral sound and Bart Cortright for his clever lighting — sometimes as simple as a lantern held aloft by an actor but sufficient to set an appropriat­ely magical mood.

 ?? Kevin Parry ?? “SAILING” across the stage are Matt Nuernberge­r, left, Ryan Melia and Curtis Gillen in “The Old Man and the Old Moon” at the Wallis.
Kevin Parry “SAILING” across the stage are Matt Nuernberge­r, left, Ryan Melia and Curtis Gillen in “The Old Man and the Old Moon” at the Wallis.

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