SAUGATUCK, Mich.— Among his fine roster
of Broadway engagements, character actor Ed Dixon's resume
includes the National Tour From Hell — otherwise known
as "The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas" starring
Ann-Margret. That must have given Dixon some stories. So must
his years of playing Thenardier in "Les Miz," bowing
to the backs of people heading for their cars and warbling
o'er collective coughers doing their best impression of hungry
prairie dogs.
Presumably to find a little catharsis, Dixon has penned "Scenery," a
deliciously caustic new two-character comedy that's first peeking
out of its embittered shell way, way off-Broadway. This lovable
summer puppy — which can't quite decide whether to be
a sharp verbal satire or a silly, old-fashioned showbiz farce — this
show's attacks on New York theater culture and its shrewd dissection
of the dysfunction that drives actors out of their minds positively
vibrates with veracity.
The premise here is that the married Richard and Marion Crain
(Lynne Wintersteller is Dixon's droll and fearless co-star)
are doing some lousy fin-de-career vehicle in a crappy Shubert
house, where the garbage Dumpster is but a waft of fetid air
away from a dressing room painted the color of lox. They kvetch
about producers, critics and "slaving in the art mines" and
whether or not a fat liberal can, in good conscience, order
a dressing-room pizza from Domino's.
Much of this could have been culled from material that Mel
Brooks or Eric Idle (or Martin Short) threw away. But there
are some sparks of real comedic originality. This is comedy
born in pain, which is the best kind. This, for sure, is the
work of a man who knows all about the barbarism of a life in
the American theater. A lot of people in Chicago would understand.