I was surprised at how charming a comedy On Golden Pond turns out to be. The movie always felt mawkish to me; but the play is a hearty and mostly very upbeat slice of life, about this old married couple facing what they worry (but never admit) will be their final summer on the shores of the lake they love in the Maine woods. The Thayers--Norman and Ethel--live simply and routinely. He's a retired professor who was born cantankerous and crotchety, it would seem; he likes to fish and read and annoy his wife and be left alone. She, something of a grande dame out here in the semi-wilderness, in the cabin that was once her father's, lives to putter: to watch the loons and swat the bugs and look out for her husband.
For his eightieth birthday this summer, she's invited their estranged daughter Chelsea to pay a visit. They haven't seen one another in eight years. Chelsea turns up with a boyfriend--Bill, a dentist--and a 13-year-old boy, Bill's son, Billy. Father and daughter fall to scraping as is their pattern; in one of the play's most delicious scenes, Norman launches a relentless attack of irony and sarcasm on poor Bill. But when Chelsea and Bill head off to Europe for vacation, they leave Billy behind; Norman unpredictably bonds with the boy who is the son he never had and the grandson he didn't realize he was wishing for.
And that's really just about it, in terms of plot. Mostly, On Golden Pond is a study in character, and a rich and reliable one at that. Norman and Ethel are at the center, of course, but there are lovely moments when we get to know Chelsea, Billy, and even a bit about Bill; there's also Charlie the mailman, who fits into the Thayer household as comfily as an old slipper.
Ernest Thompson's script is much funnier than I expected. Yet there are moments of real import, such as the scene when Norman first understands that his memory is starting to fail, that tug on the heart; and there are other moments of pure uplift and joy, like one where Ethel, in a reminiscing reverie, sings some of the old camp songs she first learned five or decades before.