I first read the Father Brown
stories – avidly – when I was about 12 and living in Catholic boarding school
in England. Father Brown was created by famous British
writer, G.K. Chesterton, and modeled on Father John O’Connor his local parish
priest. The first of the 51 stories appeared in 1912 and are still being
published today. Unlike Sherlock Holmes,
Father Brown's methods are intuitive rather than deductive. Here is
a detective who by looking into the soul of a criminal understands the motives
which drove him to commit the crime. Having
received thousands of confessions, men and women baring their souls, he’s heard
it all. Compassion was Father Brown’s métier, balanced by his perceptiveness,
and “Innocence” captures this spirit of understanding and forgiveness.
Patrick
Rieger has cleverly adapted four of the original stories into a cinematic
stream that weaves multiple crimes into a smoothly flowing thriller. Three were
personal favorites: the evil man struck down by God’s hammer; the postman no
one saw, and the phony guru who devises the perfect murder. It was a pleasure for me to see these acted
out and, hopefully, those who never read the stories will enjoy trying to
outguess Father Brown.
As head of
this young but enthusiastic cast, Blake Walker’s Father Brown is pleasingly rosy
cheeked and bespectacled; Brandon Parrish as arch criminal Flambeau is good
when evil and very good when repentant; Terrance Robinson is excellent in three
widely different roles – a calm priest, a religious fanatic and a snooty
butler; Adam Daniel Elliott seemed a bit over the top as the Chief Inspector
but in the end his rages were significant; Kate O’Toole was impressive in many
roles, especially as a reluctant floozy; Erika M. Frances was adorable as a
young gal torn between love and common sense, and Jon Snow and Michael Hoag
deserve credit for the many roles they admirably played, whether alive or dead.
Producers Allison Darby Gorjian and
Betsy Roth, who also co-directed, took on the task of making a small theatre do
justice to the vast canvas required. To
help it flow, set and lighting designer Jeremy Williams created moveable walls with
church-like panels in keeping with the ecumenical motif, helped along by
effective sound by Andrew Villaverde and appropriate costumes by Paige Draney.
This guest
production by Little Candle Productions, presented at Fremont Centre Theatre, 1000 Fremont Ave, South
Pasadena. CA 91030, runs through Sunday, April 28.
RESERVATIONS:(866) 811-4111.
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