[16] THE SAFE WORD IS BEGONIA (B. Someday Productions): Fringe review

The Safe Word is Begonia Fringe reviewWalking Fish Theatre has won accolades (including a 2010 Barrymore) for its programs in education and children’s theater. But Ari Flamingo’s THE SAFE WORD IS BEGONIA is certainly not for kids. 1950s house-fiancee Dolly (Mauri Walton) breaks things off when her conservative husband-to-be Howard (Bernard Glincosky) suggests there’s nothing wrong with a little heavy-handed discipline in a marriage (“If you want to correct me there will be no wedding”). But she reconsiders when she finds an illicit magazine which throws a new perspective on Howard’s opinions (“First I was offended … then I got to the part where she was hitting him.”) With the help of librarian Patsy (Michelle Pauls) and the magazine’s publisher (Dennis Smeltzer), Dolly begins to understand what might be driving her man.

Pauls is excellent as a bookish woman with spirited urges bubbling below the surface, and all the actors show great control as the action builds hilariously in a playful extended S&M scene. Flamingo has crafted a neatly entertaining adult (but far from XXX) piece, which presents the dominatrix as a corrective to patriarchy. There’s a lot of scarcely believable naivete in Dolly’s character, some overly long explication, and an unsatisfying anticlimax going into the denouement. But the witty punchline to end the piece sums up an entertaining, if never hard-hitting (get it?), evening of Fringe. [Walking Fish Theatre] September 6-21. fringearts.ticketleap.com/the-safe-word-is-begoniahe-deserves-it

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