Theater Review: A dark and gripping 'Beauty Queen' at Venice Theatre Stage II

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It’s a bleak life inside the small home that Maureen Folan and her mother, Mag, share in a small Irish village in Martin McDonagh’s “The Beauty of Queen of Leenane,” which opened the new season at Venice Theatre’s Stage II series Thursday night in often gripping style.

Nancy Denton, left, and Lynne Buhle play a mother and daughter at dangerous odds in Martin McDonagh's Irish drama "The Beauty Queen of Leenane" at Venice Theatre Stage II. RENEE MCVETY PHOTO/VENICE THEATRE

Nancy Denton, left, and Lynne Buhle play a mother and daughter at dangerous odds in Martin McDonagh's Irish drama "The Beauty Queen of Leenane" at Venice Theatre Stage II. RENEE MCVETY PHOTO/VENICE THEATRE

Mag is a bitter and manipulative old woman who relishes the moments when she can erase even a glimmer of happiness in her daughter’s life. By the time we meet them, Maureen is beyond fed up with caring for her mother. Even her sisters won’t see mom for more than a few hours once a year. Maureen works and comes home to one tirade or another.

Maureen feels that life is passing her by caring for someone who can’t even say “please” or “thank you,” and Mag worries that something or someone could come along to take her caregiver away.

It would be fascinating to explore their lives before the start of the play and how they got to this point, which might be another intriguing play. But I also suspect that is what director Kelly Wynn Woodland and her actors, Nancy Denton as Maureen and Lynne Buhle as Mag, did during their rehearsal process. We may not know the details, but we feel the tension in the air through the clipped conversations and the constant irritations that threaten to explode at any moment.

Nancy Denton plays an Irish woman who sees a chance at happiness with a neighbor played by Rik Robertson in "The Beauty Queen of Leenane" at Venice Theatre Stage II. RENEE MCVETY PHOTO/PROVIDED BY VENICE THEATRE

Nancy Denton plays an Irish woman who sees a chance at happiness with a neighbor played by Rik Robertson in "The Beauty Queen of Leenane" at Venice Theatre Stage II. RENEE MCVETY PHOTO/PROVIDED BY VENICE THEATRE

Denton and Buhle create believable characters, two women who have been at odds for years and are about to face their biggest challenge when Maureen gets invited to a farewell party that will reunite her with her neighbor Pato Dooley. As played by Rik Robertson, Pato is a big, bearish and caring man, who envisions a future with Maureen. But what would they do about mom, who manages to intercede at the worst possible moments? Pato becomes a ray of sunshine in Maureen’s life. But it’s a rainy country and that sun can’t stay out for long.

Jeremy Guerrero, who plays Pato’s impatient younger brother, Ray, is the comic relief of sorts. He can’t sit still, gossips about life in the village and is petulant to a degree when Mag asks him for something as simple as a cup of tea. But he’s also a key figure, conveying important information as the play develops.

Jeremy Guerrero, left, and Lynne Buhle play neighbors in "The Beauty Queen of Leenane" at Venice Theatre. RENEE MCVETY PHOTO/PROVIDED BY VENICE THEATRE

Jeremy Guerrero, left, and Lynne Buhle play neighbors in "The Beauty Queen of Leenane" at Venice Theatre. RENEE MCVETY PHOTO/PROVIDED BY VENICE THEATRE

The actors do a fine job with their consistent and mostly understandable Irish accents (a few words here and there might need some thinking about). And Woodland brings a sense of normalcy on the edge to the production with a gentler, but still-impactful approach to some of the play's more brutal confrontations.

It all moves effortlessly through its two acts on the plain but effective set designed by Donna Buckalter, with fine costumes by Chelsea Sorensen and effective lighting by Ryan Mueller. In the small confines of the Pinkerton Theatre we almost feel like voyeurs, unable to turn away from this fascinating family dynamic.

THEATER REVIEW
“THE BEAUTY QUEEN OF LEENANE”
By Martin McDonagh. Directed by Kelly Wynn Woodland. Reviewed Nov 5, Venice Theatre Stage II, 140 W. Tampa Ave., Venice. Tickets are  $28, $13-$15 for students. For more information: 488-1115; venicestage.com

THEATER REVIEW
“THE BEAUTY QUEEN OF LEENANE”
By Martin McDonagh. Directed by Kelly Wynn Woodland. Reviewed Nov 5, Venice Theatre Stage II, 140 W. Tampa Ave., Venice. Tickets are  $28, $13-$15 for students. For more information: 488-1115; venicestage.com
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Jay Handelman

Jay Handelman is the theater and television critic for the Sarasota Herald-Tribune, where he has worked since 1984. He also is President of the Foundation of the American Theatre Critics Association and a two-time past chairman of the association's executive committee. He can be reached by email or call (941) 361-4931. Follow him at @jayhandelman on Twitter. Make sure to "Like" Arts Sarasota on Facebook for news and reviews of the arts.
Last modified: November 19, 2015
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