Every
parent is always is always in search of appropriate and fun entertainment for
their kids. So it’s good news that Dobama is presenting the family-friendly
show Sherlock Holmes: The Baker Street
Irregulars. It’s a fun show for children, since it features lots of running
around, some wonderfully-staged action sequences, and just enough Message to
give it some feel-good heft.
Local
playwright Eric Coble has based his script on the eponymous graphic novels by
Tony Lee and Dan Boultwood, about a gaggle of kids who worship Mr. Holmes and take it upon themselves
to protect Victorian London against evil-doers in his absence.
And
damned if scenic designer Ben Needham hasn’t brought that “comic book” look to
the stage, using dramatic silhouettes and other graphic tricks to mimic the
cartoonish elements of the source material. For example, a scene where a good
guy and a bad guy are fighting on the roof of a speeding train is exhilarating,
thanks to splendid projection design by the wizard of those things, T. Paul
Lowry.
This
is all great stuff for any rug rats in attendance. However, by jamming together
a couple different story lines the plot is hard to follow, requiring the
detective brilliance of, say, Sherlock Holmes. Unfortunately, even though his
name leads the title, Holmes is mostly missing from these proceedings. You see,
he and his arch enemy, the dastardly Moriarty, plunge over a waterfall at the
very start, supposedly to their joint demise.
This
leaves the show in the hands of a rotating cast of six kids, who display varying degrees of potential. On this night, among the most accomplished were
Colin Frothingham as Wiggins, the Holmes-like leader of the Irregulars and
Elise Pakiela as Pockets, the crew’s expert pickpocket.
The
others Irregulars (Patrick Hensel as Chen, David Gretchko as Tiny, Adler
Chefitz as Ash and Miranda Leeann as Eliza) have nice isolated moments. But
overall the young actors, try as they might, aren't able to keep the pace of the dialog clipping
along as rapidly as that train. The result is a lot of pregnant pauses that
slowly seep the energy out of the show.
The
five adults in the cast do what they can to keep the production humming. Among
them, Christopher M. Bohan turns in a steady job as both Dr. Watson and
Sherlock, and Ray Caspio is a snarly study in nastiness as two different
villains, Morris Wiggins and Moriarty himself. It’s just a shame these two fine
actors don’t have more juicy scenes together. As the clueless Inspector Lestrade, Ananias J. Dixon nearly
devours the impressive scenery on Dobama’s vast stage, drooling and chomping
into each of his lines to cadge some laughs. Hey, you can’t blame him.
In short,
this Sherlock is a sure lock
for kids and their parents. For
everyone else, deductive reasoning might suggest a different entertainment
choice.
Sherlock
Holmes: The Baker Street Irregulars
Through
December 30 at Dobama Theatre, 2340 Lee Rd., Cleveland Heights, 216-932-3396,
dobama.org.
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