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‘Daughters’ Strays Despite Fine Acting

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Trying to get a handle on “Vic Lanudi’s Daughters” at the McCadden is one treacherously slippery proposition.

Playwright Marc Umile, who also directs, originally wrote his meandering and undisciplined drama--about a dead actor’s attempts to mend his fences with his four estranged daughters--as a one-act. Perhaps the effort to flesh out the play to full-length form has overwhelmed its flimsy premise.

As Vic, the ghostly dad, Vincent Baggetta is so laid-back we can easily believe he’s dead. Mark Beltzman plays Dominic, the waggish angel (he prefers “cosmic entity”) whose assignment is to monitor Vic’s earthly efforts at reparation.

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As the disjointed plot unfolds--including an oddly interruptive flashback scene in which we are introduced to flamboyant actress Vicky (Laura McLauchlin), one of Vic’s many wives--we realize that the playwright needs organizational help.

Fortunately, Sharisse Baker, Stephanie Brown, Sibel Ergener and Saadia Persad--the actresses who play Vic’s four adult daughters--are so fiercely committed to their characters that we almost develop an emotional stake in this histrionic hodge-podge. Despite their most dedicated efforts, however, Umile’s ghostly drama remains irritatingly inchoate.

* “Vic Lanudi’s Daughters,” McCadden Theatre, 1157 McCadden Place, Hollywood. Thursdays-Sundays, 8 p.m. Ends Aug. 24. $15. (310) 395-5503. Running time: 2 hours, 10 minutes.

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