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Health & Fitness

Theater for Kids: Antics, Music — and a Laughable Burp

I’m not the least bit objective.

I’m 129-percent convinced that Hannah, my six-year-old granddaughter, is a bright delight.

She loves to watch YouTube with me — caterpillars’ transforming into butterflies, volcanoes spewing lava, scientific marvels galore.

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But she can instantly revert to a bounce-in-her-seat, giggle-out-loud little girl fascinated with Disney princesses.

Or The Cat in the Hat, an interactive show we just caught at the Marin Theatre Company, squeezed in a squeal-and-fun-filled Saturday between Strawberry’s In-N-Out Burger and the Presidio’s Family Day Kite Festival.

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The 45-minute play was the first of a first — that is, the first of five shows aimed at kids, four of them produced by the Bay Area Children’s Theatre, in the MTC’s initial theater series for youthful audiences.

The show convinced me anew that I’m not the least bit objective: I was as impressed with it as my granddaughter — for slightly different reasons.

I know she thoroughly enjoyed the exaggerated antics from ever-so-familiar characters originally penned by Theodor Geisel (she knows him as Dr. Seuss), particularly the unmanageable juggling of The Cat and the flummoxed scurrying of the blue-haired Thing 1 and Thing 2.

At the same time, the show blew me away because it emphasized exceptionally age-appropriate, relatable action for youngsters; featured perky primary colors in both costumes and set; retained the monosyllabic sing-song rhymes expected from a Seuss story; and showcased six cast members who clowned and sang and danced with a degree of professionalism I hadn’t expected.

Especially Doyle Ott, who gleefully portrayed The Cat, a guy with both circuses and the San Francisco Shakespeare Festival in his résumé.

I reveled, too, in the perfectly timed, cartoon-like sound effects added by Beryl Baker — not to mention the brief recorded excerpts of classical music (“The William Tell Overture” and “Sabre Dance,” for example).

The production — and director Erin Merritt — happily stuck to Seuss’ text and his unwritten theme: When mom’s away, the kids (and The Cat) will play

Silly choreography by Laura Ricci added to everyone’s pleasure — as did The Cat playing golf with a black umbrella, riding a pink-wheeled unicycle, and strumming a tennis racket like a guitar and pseudo-creating lively Flamenco rhythms.

The biggest laugh, as might be expected with an age group of people all under four-feet tall, came from an outrageously loud burp.

The Cat in the Hat has been so well liked since being created in 1954 that the book’s been translated into a dozen languages. It has more than 11 million copies in print.

The staged version can only build on that popularity.

If the remainder of the Theater for Young Audiences season can come anywhere near the gusto of The Cat, I can guarantee matinee happiness.

Check out A Year with Frog & Toad, starting Jan. 11;  Mercy Watson to the Rescue, beginning March 8, and Ladybug Girl and Bumblbee Boy in May. Or MTC’s own production, Rapunzel, a Nov. 2-10 show that focuses on “taking risks and overcoming fear rather than being the subject of a witch’s petty grudges and a prince’s daring deeds.”

Theater for Young Audiences tickets at the Marin Theatre Company, 397 Miller Ave., Mill Valley, cost $15 for children under 14; $20 for adults; $17 for seniors 65 and above. Information: (415) 388-5208 or marintheatre.org.

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