While the four characters only appear on stage individually, their stories are deeply connected. Katie Winn (Brenda Sue Cowley), an American actress, has retired into seclusion and spent 10 years on a Welsh farm, creating a second career as an author of science-fiction novels. Carole (Krystal Kennedy) arrives on Katie’s doorstep claiming to be the daughter Katie gave up for adoption 20 years earlier. David Davies (Tobin Atkinson), Katie’s neighbor, is a bachelor farmer who may be infatuated with both Katie and Carole. And Edward Selwyn (Dan Larrinaga) is the local detective inspector, looking into the possible connection between a headless body discovered in the vicinity and the missing ex-musician who may be Carole’s father.
Staged by
director Anne Stewart Mark in an intimate chair-and-table setup in the
Yet Dorrell’s work comes together as another celebration of his homeland’s love of a good story, and not just through those the characters tell to us. The titular knight is the protagonist of Katie’s book series: an insect-like warrior fighting in a post-apocalyptic world against evil. Dorrell and the performers treat this potentially silly genre concept with affection and respect, recognizing the way people craft heroic narratives about their own lives. These people find Sir Formidor in themselves in a variety of ways—and we get to find the pleasures of theatrical storytelling in them.
Talking Wales: Finding Sir Formidor @ Rose Wagner Center Black Box Theatre, 138 W. 300 South, 801-886-3019, April 21-23, 7:30 p.m. & April 24, 2 p.m. & 7:30 p.m. Limited free seating with reservation. UtahContemporaryTheatre.org