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Expert Actresses, Dated ‘Daughters’

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SPECIAL TO THE TIMES

The pleasure of Del Shore’s “Daughters of the Lone Star State” at the Zephyr is that it’s a chance to see a first-rate team of mature actresses strut their stuff. The pain is, it’s just a sitcomesque formula drama with a dated message.

“Daughters of the Lone Star State” is the third part of the playwright’s Lowake, Tex., trilogy that began with “Cheatin’,” a 1984 comedy about adultery, and “Daddy’s Dyin’, Who’s Got the Will?” (1987), a mildly funny satire about buying the farm that was made into a movie with Beau Bridges. This ditty zeros in on a charity club full of cackling, oil-monied white women and the racism that flies when a couple of new--non-rich and non-white--members try to join up.

Nine of the 11 actresses in this cast are over 55 years old, according to the press materials, and they’re nearly all expert--especially Lu Leonard as the testy Liddy Bell, Gloria Le Roy as mixed-up Mildred and Carole Cook as the damaged Darlene. The younger members of the ensemble are weaker, but they’re struggling with underwritten roles.

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Ron Link keeps these golden girls trotting to the right places on stage, making the most of the talent. But he can only do so much with a passel of pat characterizations (the rich bitch who drinks; the “white trash” hausfrau; the snippy old-maid sisters) and predictable prejudices. Fact is, the genre this writer’s been plowing for the better part of a decade now is, as they might say in Lowake, a dog that don’t hunt anymore.

*’Daughters of the Lone Star State,” Zephyr Theatre, 7456 Melrose Ave., West Hollywood . Thursdays-Saturdays, 8 p.m., Sundays 3 p.m. Runs indefinitely. $18.50-$20. (213) 660-8587. Running time: 2 hours.

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