The Ties That Bind


The squeamish factor looms large in the opening scenes of "I Do! I Do!" And it’s not the Copake Theatre Company’s doing, except that Artistic Director Carl Ritchie chose this smarmy musical based on Jan de Hartog’s play "The Fourposter."

But like the 1966 Broadway production, which ran for 560 performances, the audience here overlooked the coy, virginal stuff in the opening and clearly took to Amy Fiebke as Agnes and Robert Dalton’s Michael as they march through their 50-year marriage.

The alliance, which starts so glowingly, stumbles, of course, as the two head into predictable troubles: money, offspring, fatigue. He chews in his sleep. She overdraws the bank account. He is always early to events. She is always late. His hair is turning gray. She hates his latest book. He accuses her of driving him into the arms of another woman. She feels lonely. And so it goes. The characters get real. There’s pain.

Which is what saves "I Do! I Do!" from its own mawkishness, that and the actors who are easy to like, good to look at and know how to sing. Fiebke is especially terrific in "Flaming Agnes," a number about life after infidelity.

Ritchie’s direction is brisk, Helen Suter’s bedroom set is fine and the music, though mostly undistinguished, moves matters right along. If you can survive the opening of Act I, you’ll probably like "I Do! I Do!"

 

"I Do! I Do!" runs at the Grange in Copake, NY, through Oct. 14. For tickets, call 518-325-1234.

Latest News

Ecology Success Stories:
A Cary Fellow’s optimism

With the ban of DDT, the bald eagle has come back from 417 nesting pairs in 1963 to 71,400 nesting pairs and was removed from the Endangered Species List in 2007.

Seaq68 via Pixabay

MILLBROOK — In today’s world of climate change worry, Peter Groffman, research fellow at the Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies in Millbrook, gave a lecture of hope for the future of the environment.

Groffman “studies urban ecology and how climate change alters microbial processes that support plant growth and air and water quality.” He is the president-elect of the Ecological Society of America and teaches at the City University of New York and Brooklyn College.

Keep ReadingShow less
Affordable housing hearing in Salisbury

SALISBURY — The Planning and Zoning Commission (P&Z) will hold a public hearing Monday, May 20, 6:45 on Zoom on the Salisbury Housing Trust’s (SHT) application to build two affordable housing houses on town-owned property on Undermountain Road and Grove Street.

The commission received the application at its April 15 meeting.

Keep ReadingShow less
Hotchkiss hosts interstate Ultimate Frisbee tourney

Luke Warner soared over the Amherst offense to swat down a pass during the Ultimate Mini-Tourney at The Hotchkiss School Saturday, April 20.

Patrick L. Sullivan

LAKEVILLE — On a soggy Saturday, April 20, eight teams competed in an Ultimate Frisbee mini tournament hosted by The Hotchkiss School.

There were teams from New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts and Connecticut. Two middle schools competed against high school junior varsity squads.

Keep ReadingShow less
Learning to compost at Kent Memorial Library

Josiah and Everett Newton with Aunt Kathy learned the importance of sorting and separating food scraps recycleables, and trash at Kent Memorial Library as part of a composting class for Earth Day.

Lans Christensen

KENT — The Kent Memorial Library and Kent Conservation Commission joined forces to bring a meaningful and educational program concerning nutrients, recycling and trash April 18.

Carol Franken of the Conservation Commission, the presenter, said one of her main composting concerns was, “How to make it meaningful to preschoolers.”

Keep ReadingShow less