Kate Guentzel admits she was a little jealous when she watched John Catron kissing actor Valeri Mudek in "Uncle Vanya" at the Guthrie Theater last fall. Yes, it was on stage, and they were playing characters, but Guentzel felt a twinge watching her husband in another woman's embrace.
Catron is portraying another romancer in the Jungle Theater's production of "The Heiress," which opens Friday. This time, though, Guentzel will be in a better position when Catron starts mashing lips. The two play lovers frustrated by her father's suspicions that he's just a cad out for her money. Jeffrey Hatcher, better known as a playwright, plays the father in the staging, directed and designed by Bain Boehlke.
"You have to form an immediate trust with the other actor," Catron said when asked for his take on stage romance. "You could be kissing a complete stranger. Of course, with Kate we had that trust on the first day, and that's a gift. You're ahead of the game."
Guentzel and Catron two years ago joined the growing ranks of Twin Cities actors married to one another. "The Heiress" marks the second time they've played opposite each other, after "School for Lies" last January at Park Square.
"I got a call from Bain, and he said he wanted to hear the two of us read for these roles," Guentzel said.
Boehlke tried other combinations through a long process of auditioning, but chose Catron and Guentzel in the end. She plays Catherine Sloper, a shy woman who stands to inherit her father's fortune. Catron is Morris Townsend, who sweeps Catherine off her feet. Her father, smelling a rat, threatens to disinherit Catherine if she runs off with Morris. Love can be a tough business.
Ruth and Augustus Goetz adapted the 1947 play from the 1880 novel "Washington Square" by Henry James. A 1995 Broadway revival starred Cherry Jones as Catherine. Boehlke's cast includes Wendy Lehr, Jennifer Blagen, Charity Jones, Anna Sundberg and Paris Hunter Paul.
Winning for losing
Catron and Guentzel started to notice each other when they performed in Illusion Theater's "My Antonia" in 2010. He remembers their first date — playing poker.