ANNA MARIA – The Island Players continue their historic 75th season with Alan Ayckbourn’s “Communicating Doors.” Directed by veteran director Preston Boyd and stage managed by his talented wife, Priscilla Boyd, the show zigs and zags through times of hilarity and plenty of suspense. Even though the killer’s identity is clear in the first act, how this thing will end is certainly not.
The characters cross paths as the result of a door to a storage room in the hotel suite that works as a time machine, but not every character can use it, and it only works in 20 year “leaps” to the times each murdered ex-wife once stayed in the room: 1974, 1994 and 2014, the year Phoebe arrives to become the center of this time warp centric story.
Audiences may find themselves a bit confused at first, but the whisking into another time soon becomes as expected as it is frequent. With plenty of laugh lines and an abundance of physical comedy, the exact story doesn’t hold as much power as the fascinating action handled by experienced actors who know how to not only get the best out of a line, but also can manage falling over a balcony “wall,” having a head bounced against the floor and plenty more action that has most likely left more than one cast member with a bruise or two.
We first see a “special consultant” arrive in 2014 at a large London hotel suite. Phoebe (Morgan Powls), whose trade name is Poopay, finds that her client, Reece (Dan Coppinger), does not seek her usual services. A dying old man with a guilty conscience, he asks Phoebe to sign as a witness on his written confession of the long-ago murders of two different wives. He is accompanied by his long-time loyal assistant and friend, Julian (Joseph Smith) who executes the role of the quintessential bad guy with perceived ease.
Director Preston Boyd did an outstanding job in getting the most out of this talented cast of veteran actors, who overcame an illness that affected most of the actors and caused the delay of opening night. Audiences would never know many of the rehearsals were done virtually. Serious talent is on display, and the plot is one of the most unpredictable in recent Island Players history.
“Communicating Doors” is a can’t-miss, and it’s not difficult to see why this season continues to sell out just about every performance.
The show continues through March 24. “Communicating Doors,” runs Tuesday through Saturdays at 7:30 p.m. with Sunday matinees at 2 p.m. Both on-line and box office ticket sales are available for the remainder of the run. On-line at www.theislandplayers.org and box office at 941-778-5755. Box office hours are 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Monday through Saturday and one hour before curtain on Sundays for will call tickets only.