On stage: The Bear, Blind Date and Celebration

Sheenagh Murphy, Michael Whelan and John Mooney rehearsing The Bear by Chekhov

REPRISING their short play series at Locke Barโ€™s Loft Venue, Torch Players this year welcome Mary Immaculate Collegeโ€™s drama group MIDAS for a turn Wednesday 15 to Friday 18, 8pm.

Forย  Torch, anticipate โ€˜The Bearโ€™ by Chekhov, one of his lighter pieces and Peter Quilterโ€™s โ€˜Blind Dateโ€™, to be directed by Joanne Oโ€™Brien. MIDAS bowls in with a challenge from Pinter, โ€˜Celebrationโ€™ and this will be directed by the talented Luke Frawley. Arts page talked to Torch godfather Maurice Oโ€™Sulllivan as to what lies ahead and his choice of โ€˜The Bearโ€™.

โ€œWe always like a Chekhov but itโ€™s hard to get around to doing one of his greats like โ€˜The Cherry Orchardโ€™,โ€ is the point he makes. โ€œThe Bear is one he wrote earlier in his career and made a lot of money out of it. Itโ€™s a farce, almost vaudeville Broadway in style. The story is of a widow Popova grieving for the loss of her husband for years, and she feels she will be in mourning for everโ€.

Loyal servant Luka looks to boost her perspective, invoking the world of men out there – when a neighbour calls. โ€œSmirnov is a landlord and this guy wants the debt her husband owed to him repaid. She canโ€™t however, as she is waiting on money from anotherโ€.

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Her steward must return from town across the plains with the bag of 1200 roubles and being kept waiting pokes the bear โ€“ just as the playwright takes a stab at the fast moving mores of Russian society.

โ€œSmirnov is a bit of a boor, the Bear of the title and ..then he becomes smitten by her. Heโ€™s falling for herโ€.

Guns before roses, though.

Maurice saw Harold Pinterโ€™s โ€˜Celebrationโ€™ in London years ago and describes it as โ€œan unusual piece set at an expensive restaurant in London. Four people are at one table, there are two at another and it starts off fairly normal, then goes awryโ€.

Terms such as existentialist surface as the characters โ€œgo on a philosophical jaunt. Some laughs there too but this is not a comedy.โ€ Underscore that.

Finally, โ€˜Blind Dateโ€™ is โ€œa bitter sweet comedy that is a warm and funny exploration of loveโ€.

Written by Quilter, a man best known for his Judy Garland musical โ€˜End of the Rainbowโ€™, at its heart is a couple who met through the lonely hearts column. Brave??

Tickets โ‚ฌ10 at door, George’s Quay.

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