Total Rating: 
**
Previews: 
January 25, 2008
Ended: 
February 10, 2008
Country: 
USA
State: 
California
City: 
Oceanside
Company/Producers: 
New Vision Theater Company
Theater Type: 
Regional; Independent
Theater: 
Sunshine Brooks Theater
Theater Address: 
217 Coast Highway
Phone: 
760-529-9140
Running Time: 
2 hrs
Genre: 
Murder Mystery
Author: 
Pat Cook
Director: 
John & Yolanda Kalb
Review: 

A town council meeting can't be much more fun than when the whole council is suspected in the murder of an out-of-towner. Pat Cook's Death and Taxes, the current offering at Oceanside's Sunshine Brooks Theater, involves the audience in the search for the murderer.

Prolific Cook, with over 125 published plays, has written 24 whodunit murder mysteries. The playwright has merged satire, farce and several other genres of humor in his Death and Taxes.

The city council of Hendrix, a small backwoods town no state would lay claim to, is investigating the murder of a stranger. A stranger whom nobody admits seeing but all have met. We, the audience, are the town folks and are given the opportunity to ask these rubes questions regarding the city, the reenactment of the crime, and their general ineptitude. Mayor Kathleen Lyles (Lois Sprays) tries, ineffectively, to bring order to the chaos of the meeting. Probably the world's most inept sheriff, Wesley Thorne (Ryan Lee) has zero investigative skills. Town Clerk, Lydia Kleft (Talia Davis), somehow finished her lower education without any benefit of acquired knowledge. The editor of the weekly—or is that weakly?—rag, Eddie King (Aaron Derwin), is quite a few pages short of a tabloid and doesn't even carry a writing instrument.

If this wasn't enough of a motley crew, there is Cora Sedgwick (Toni Perrine). Cora, who discovered the body—and possibly more—stepped on a rake in the yard and got hit by the handle, which jarred what little brains she had left. Then there are the Johansons, Mattie and Carl (Chanel Hennessey and Rick Lee), who spend so much time squabbling it is impossible for them to learn anything about the crime.

The only one with any apparent intelligence is old Doc Bishop (Fred Hanrahan). Doc at least had an autopsy performed on the body. The toxicology results, refuting Sheriff Thorne's claim that it was a natural death, showed death by poisoning. Leave it, quite naturally, to a drama teacher, Evelyn Martindale (Sharon Kloosterman), to bring organization to the investigation. By the time she's done with her in-depth questioning and incisive analysis, there's total confusion in the audience. This was the time that we all turned in our nomination for the evil killer. In the large audience, only one member identified the perp accurately.

This is just a fun show, so far over the top that over-acting becomes the norm, and any attempt at normalcy is frowned upon. Well, not totally! The relationship of the Johansons is comedically quite natural. For example, Hennessey gets flip to Lee, she slaps him around, and he takes it. They get some of the biggest laughs, but there are enough laughs going around to please the whole cast. At intermission, the townspeople (us) are invited onstage to investigate the crime scene. Some great clues, all terribly misleading.

Death and Taxes is just plain fun. It is a bit silly. It is a bit strange. It is a bit illogical. It is a laugh-filled evening.

Cast: 
Lois Sprays, Sharon Kloosterman, Aaron Derwin, Talia Davis, Ryan Lee, Rick Lee, Toni Perrine, Fred Hanrahan
Technical: 
Set: John Kalb; Costumes: Yolanda Kalb; Costumes/Props: Yolanda Kalb & Mary Bentley, Make-up: Mary Freeman
Critic: 
Robert Hitchox
Date Reviewed: 
February 2008