Although A Noise Within’s 2025-26 season includes dramas and tragedies by August Wilson, William Shakespeare, and Arthur Miller, ANW has chosen to open its new season with a wild and crazy comedy. One Man, Two Guvnors is British bard Richard Bean’s 2011 adaptation of The Servant of Two Masters by 18th-century Venetian playwright Carlo Goldoni. I’m guessing that this confection of frothy frivolity was selected to lighten the mood for a theater perched so close to where the recent wildfires wrought widespread devastation.
Bean has reset Goldoni’s play from Italy to the seaside village of Brighton in the modern England of the early 1960s. A four-piece skiffle band (music director Rod Bagheri is the lead vocalist who also plays acoustic guitar and keyboard) performs live onstage in this musical with some dancing (Indira Tyler is the 1960s dance consultant). The flimsy plot, which mainly seems to serve as an excuse to pile antics upon, involves the overworked titular character, Francis Henshall (Kasey Mahaffy). Francis works for a couple of different employers. There are also romantic subplots, and if I understood correctly, amidst the humorous hubbub, an offstage murder has been perpetrated, too.
The storyline is a rationale for a compilation of sight gags, slapstick, sound gags, and lots of running about in this frenetic frenzy of a farce with a swinging sixties sensibility. My favorite bit was Francis’ literally fighting with himself, a bit of physical comedy deftly executed by Mahaffy with panache that made me laugh my head off. The play’s tomfoolery also includes some audience interaction, which updates the aspiring actor’s playbook as to how to break into the theater. Previously, wannabe thesps may have thought the way to get onstage was to attend a Lee Strasberg, Stella Adler, Sanford Meisner, or Lonny Chapman, et al, acting school or studio, get an agent and/or manager, attend cattle calls, etc.
But now there’s a much easier way to get a part onstage: Just buy a ticket for One Man, Two Guvnors, and as the raucous comedy unspools, you may get cast and become part of the action.
In addition to Mahaffy, the other standout in this cast of 14 (that is, not including audience members impromptu recruited into the mayhem) is Paul David Story as Alan Dangle, a self-important, overly dramatic youth inspired by the period’s “Angry Young Man” plays, who seeks to become a serious thespian. Projections designer Nick Santiago enhances the set with very British imagery.
Although there are some references to the Mau Mau, Margaret Thatcher, and the like, this bagatelle mostly eschews any John Osborne-like social commentary in favor of madcap merriment, distraction, diversion, and escapist entertainment. The opening night aud seemed to thoroughly enjoy itself, laughing throughout the two-act lunacy adroitly co-directed by ANW stalwarts Julia Rodriguez-Elliott and Geoff Elliott. As for moi, I was mildly amused by all the monkey business but am looking forward to Death of a Salesman.
A Noise Within presents on Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays at 7:30 p.m., with 2:00 p.m. matinees on Saturdays and Sundays through Sept. 28. Post–performance conversations with the artists will take place every Friday and on Sunday, Sept. 14. ANW is at 3352 E. Foothill Blvd., Pasadena, CA 91107. For information and tickets, call (626)356-3100 or visit the website.
We hope you appreciated this article. At People’s World, we believe news and information should be free and accessible to all, but we need your help. Our journalism is free of corporate influence and paywalls because we are totally reader-supported. Only you, our readers and supporters, make this possible. If you enjoy reading People’s World and the stories we bring you, please support our work by donating or becoming a monthly sustainer today. Thank you!









