Thompson Theatre:
adapt: David Ives from Georges Feydeau; dir: Mark Lamos.
In A Flea in Her Ear Raymonde Chandebise suspects that her husband, Victor, a placid and successful insurance executive, is secretly having an affair. To find out, she and her friend Lucienne write him an anonymous love letter suggesting a rendezvous at the shady Frisky Puss Hotel. Thinking the letter was intended for his coworker, the gigolo Tournel, Victor sends Tournel off to make the rendezvous in his place. Lucienne’s jealous Spanish husband, meanwhile, finds the letter, recognizes his wife’s handwriting and takes his pistols to the Frisky Puss, hoping to catch her in the act. Meanwhile, Victor’s nephew Camille tries to warn everyone about the mix-up, but his ridiculous speech impediment prevents anyone from understanding him. In Act Two, all decamp to the Frisky Puss where, it turns out, the drunken bellboy Poche is the exact double of the proper Victor Chandebise. In Act Three the vortex spins even faster as all the parties return to the Chandebise home utterly confused about what actually happened and who was who at the Frisky Puss. The drunken bellboy arrives, is mistaken once again for Victor, and all the threads of the multiple mix-ups are sorted out as Victor and Raymonde recognize their mutual confusions and are reunited.
Videos
Jersey Boys
Milton Theatre (2/13 - 3/9) | ||
The Secret Garden
Second Street Players (7/11 - 7/20) | ||
One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest
Second Street Players (2/7 - 2/16) | ||
Little Shop of Horrors
Second Street Players (10/10 - 10/19) | ||
King Lear
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Peter Pan and Wendy
Second Street Players (3/28 - 3/30) | ||
Hadestown
The Playhouse on Rodney Square (5/2 - 5/4) | ||
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