Gloucester Stage’s ‘Private Lives’ Injects New Life into Comedy Classic

Katie Croyle and Gunnar Manchester in ‘Private Lives’ at Gloucester Stage. Photos by James Grow

‘Private Lives’ – by Noël Coward; Directed by Diego Arciniegas; Scenic Design by Izmir Ickbal; Sound Design by Eric Hamel; Costume Design by Nia Safarr Banks; Lighting Design by Anshuman Bhatia; Fight & Intimacy Direction by Angie Jepson. Presented by Gloucester Stage at 267 E. Main St., Gloucester, through June 25

by Mike Hoban

Early on in the classic Noel Coward comedy Private Lives, Victor, the blissfully unaware second husband of Amanda, the beautiful and sophisticated socialite, laments to her, “I wish I knew you better,” to which she quickly replies, “It’s just as well you don’t.” Truer words were never spoken, and over the next two hours, he and Sybil Chase, his equally unlucky marital counterpart, will get to know their new spouses in ways that they never bargained for in this riotous season opener for Gloucester Stage.

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‘Private Lives’ a Classy Production of Classic Summer Fare at DTF

(Rachel Pickup as Amanda and Shawn Fagan as Elyot in the Dorset Theatre Festival production of ‘Private Lives. Photos: Joey Moro)

Reviewed by Shelley A. Sackett

‘Private Lives’ – Written by Nöel Coward. Directed by Evan Yionoulis; Set Design: Lee Savage. Lighting Design: Donald Holder. Costume Design: Katherine B. Roth. Sound Design: Jane Shaw. Fight Choreographer: BH Barry. Presented at the Dorset Playhouse, 104 Cheney Road, Dorset, VT through July 6.

Nothing welcomes light summery breezes like a witty Nöel Coward comedy of manners, and the Dorset Theatre Festival is spot on in its choice of the timeless Private Lives to open its 42nd season. The plot is deceptively simple. Divorced spouses Elyot (Shawn Fagan) and Amanda (the sublime and worth-the-price-of-admission Rachel Pickup) have remarried and are honeymooning with their respective new spouses, Sybil (Anna Crivelli) and Victor (Hudson Oz). By the divine intervention of Coward’s wicked imagination, they end up in adjacent rooms on the night they are each to start their new lives. When they see each other across their shared balcony’s hedge, the sparks fly and they impulsively flee their hapless new partners to resume what they have idealized as their romantic destiny.

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