[Capdist-auditions] TWO BY TWO - Not So Common Players, Clifton Park, NY - Jan. 29 & 30
lwandruski at aol.com
lwandruski at aol.com
Tue Jan 17 15:18:42 EST 2006
TWO BY TWO
Music by Richard Rodgers
Lyrics by Martin Charnin
Book by Peter Stone
Opened November 10, 1970 at the Imperial Theatre, New York and ran for
343 performances
Presented by the Not So Common Players of Clifton Park
Laura W. Andruski, director
Pat Douglas, music director
Auditions: Sun., Jan. 29, 1-4pm; Mon. Jan. 30, 7-10PM at the Locust
Lane Clubhouse in Clifton Park.
Performance Dates: April 28-30; May 5-7
Synopsis:
Imagine Noah as your average 600-year-old, working-class guy from the
Bronx, somehow transported back to the days of Genesis. He has a loving
wife, three sons, two daughters-in-law and a chicken farm. One day, God
pays a visit, informs him that the world is going to be destroyed and
gives him the job of saving two of every living species, along with his
own family. Noah reacts as many of us would, he calls his family
together: his long-suffering wife, Esther; his eldest son Shem and his
wife Leah - they're the materialistic ones, successful in the olive
business; his second son Ham, the prodigal one, who gambles and
neglects his wife Rachel; and the youngest son Japheth, the idealistic
one, an angry young man who still lives at home. When Noah explains
what God has told him to do, they too react as many of us would.
Noah can't convince them; it takes the intervention of God, with the
aid of a "gitka," a magical Old Testament creature that would sing in
the presence of God. Together Noah and the gitka win over the family.
As pairs of animals begin to gather around them, Noah and his family
follow God's instructions in building a boat from gopher wood, but
Japheth is outraged at the supreme being. How can He destroy the entire
world? Doesn't He like something, somewhere?
The construction continues, but very soon religious faith and
engineering conflict. Noah finds no mention in God's plans of a rudder
with which to steer the boat. Japheth, also the practical one and
family engineer, can't believe God intends them simply to drift. An
argument ensues between father and his sons, one which Noah wins.
More problems: Japheth can't board the ark without a mate; there are no
obvious candidates. And of the existing marriages, at least one, Ham's
and Rachel's, is in trouble, as she confides to her mother-in-law.
Noah's attempts to lead his family only seem to fail. Japheth says he
would rather stay behind and drown, as a final protest against a God
who would destroy his own creation.
With the ark not yet complete, Japheth walks out, leaving Noah to
finish the job, but, as Esther observes, Noah is an old man. God,
observing the crisis, makes a miracle, and Noah reappears 510 years
younger.
Japheth returns, out of loyalty, but is taken aback by the change in
his father, who has now acquired an unseemly interest in matters
sexual. Noah, to his credit, more readily accepts the change in
Japheth, who has brought home a woman named Goldie. Japheth, it seems,
had gone to town to warn his countrymen about their impending doom,
which only served to enrage them, and he would have died prior to the
flood had not Goldie saved his life. On the other hand, she is Not of
Our Persuasion -she's a Golden Girl from the nearby Temple of the
Golden Ram - but Noah, at least, is glad to see her. With the storm
approaching, she joins the family on the now-completed ark.
But there is another complication: Japheth's real reason for running
off, we learn, was that he has been secretly in love with Rachel, his
brother's wife. Alone with her for a moment, he confesses, then tries
again to run away. Noah knocks him out and has him carried aboard, then
begs God once more to reconsider. But the rains are already falling.
Noah and his family emerge after a forty-day downpour to see a vast
ocean and a sunny day, and they make plans for the future. Japheth
remains estranged, but Noah's attention is now directed to his wife,
who feels ill and needs reassurance from her now much-younger husband.
Elsewhere on the ship Ham has become infatuated with Goldie. In her
unsuccessful defence against his advances, she reminds him about her
sacred untouchable status as a temple girl.
Relationships in a jumble, the family watches the rudderless ark
collide with floating debris from the old world. Again Japheth wants to
install a rudder, but Noah refuses. Immediately the ark hits something
and begins to sink, and Japheth takes charge, while Noah goes off to
get drunk.
Japheth and Rachel now understand that they can't live without each
other. Across the boat, Shem and Leah are conversely looking for
reasons to stay together, which they decide to do, grudgingly.
When Noah returns as an old man again, he finds the family in turmoil.
Ham wants to divorce Rachel and marry Goldie. Japheth and Rachel want
to marry. Esther is on their side, but Esther is dying. Noah resists,
but as Esther dies in his arms, he finally agrees.
With the earth dry once more, Noah must now say goodbye to his
children: each couple goes off in a different direction, each wife now
big with child. His work is completed, but Noah is not content. He
demands that God give him a sign, a promise not to destroy the world
again. Noah offers God a deal: if God will preserve the earth, people
will remember His name. God signals agreement and a rainbow appears as
the curtain falls.
Info: Original cast starred: Danny Kaye, Marilyn Cooper, Madeline
Kahn, Walter Willison, Harry Goz, Joan Copeland, Michael Karm and
Tricia O'Neil.
Characters:
Noah, the biblical patriarch. Baritone. 50s+
Esther, his long-suffering wife. Alto-Mezzo. 50s+
Shem, the oldest son. Materialistic; successful in the olive business.
Bass-baritone. 30s-40s
Ham, the prodigal middle son, who gambles and neglects his wife Rachel.
Tenor. 20-30s
Japheth, the youngest son. The idealistic one, an angry young man who
still lives at home. Tenor. 20s
Leah, wife to Shem. Greedy and a bit shrewish. Mezzo-soprano. 20-30s
Rachel, unhappily married to Ham. Soprano. 20s
Goldie, a Golden Girl from the nearby Temple of the Golden Ram.
Soprano. 20-30s
For more information call (518) 383-8277 or email LWAndruski at aol.com
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