Three new plays.
Clubbed Thumb's "Men on Boats" by Jaclyn Backhaus at Playwrights Horizons is clever, perhaps too clever. The conceit is to have an all female cast enact the all-male expedition in 1869 to traverse the Green and Colorado Rivers in Wyoming for the first time (by the white man). I applaud the truly ensemble cast, too uniform in excellence to single just one or two, under the direction of Will Davis. The minimal set and physicality of the acting create a large space for the imagination which could have been quite magical. In this case, I found the magic lacking although I appreciated the muscle that when into the performances.
"Nat Turner in Jerusalem" at New York Theatre Workshop is a fine play but perhaps too didactic and linear. We are fed the history of the black revolutionary slave on his last night before execution and a look into the mind of Thomas Gray, the man who met with him that night and wrote "The Confessions of Nat Turner," which has become required reading in many American high schools. But that's just it. I felt the play, directed by Megan Sandberg-Zakian, was a history lesson rather than a theatrical experience. In an effort to break up the static nature of the play, 90 minutes in a cell, the footprint of the cell is moved incrementally across the stage but this is also static. We wait for the next move, 20 feet along, each time the lights are dimmed between scenes. Philip James Brannon and Rowan Vickers, however, are extraordinarily good as Turner and Gray. I wished for them to have a more adventurous play to act in.
"Phaedra(s)" at the BAM Harvey is a long bewildering mess saved only by the exquisite performance(s) of Isabelle Huppert. I would like to leave it at that but I'll plunge onward. Directed by Krzysztof Warlikowski, the three different versions are "after" (as stated in the program) the plays of Sarah Kane, J.M. Coetzee and Wajdi Mouawad. The first of the three "Phaedra"'s in the work of the Lebanese-born, French-bred Wajdi Mouawad. Just a mess. Why and to what purpose the androgynous Arab go-go dancer? It sucked the air out of the room and went on and on and on to no purpose in service of the story. We could have been spared at least 30 minutes of the exhausting 3 1/2 hour play by eliminating her (him?). For that matter, why the Arabic song that opens the play and goes on interminably? Oh, never mind... Huppert appears first as a very campy Aphrodite before transitioning into Phaedra where she spends almost the entirety of the action of the play writhing about on a bed in the center of the stage with a bloody crotch. You get the idea. The second is by the talented British playwright Sarah Kane whose brilliant "4:48 Psychosis" Huppert performed at BAM ten years ago and who, like Phaedra herself, committed suicide by hanging. This version of the Phaedra story is the most cohesive but a bit leaden. The final Phaedra is realized by the novelist J.M. Coetzee. Huppert is presented as the Australian writer Elizabeth Costello who has come to where(?) to deliver a lecture on the subject of Eros. This version, coming at the end, is the lightest and Huppert is wonderful as the scatty intellectual who pings and pongs all over the subject and finally enacts a scene from Racine's great interpretation of Phaedra. It's beautiful. Oh, to have seen this "Phaedra" in it's entirety instead of this ratty batch of imposters.
Saturday, September 24, 2016
Thursday, August 4, 2016
Shakespeare, More Shakespeare and some Small Mouth Sounds
Lisa Wolpe is a gender-bending Shakespearean actress. Her one-person show "Shakespeare and the Alchemy of Gender," currently running in repertoire with her three-person condensed "Macbeth" at Here on Dominick Street in Lower Manhattan, is an ode to her father, Hans Max Joachim Wolpe, a Holocaust survivor and war hero born in Berlin who fought the Nazis with Canadian Winnipeg Rifles and committed suicide when she was 4. It is interspersed with monologues from the different Shakespearean roles she has played that resonate with her journey to contextualize how she was able to develop empathy for her dad and ultimately for herself. She takes us on a fascinating hour-long journey into her mind and we come away not only with an understanding of the complex person she is but perhaps even a greater appreciation of Shakespeare.
"Macbeth3" is a mad dash through the play we shall not name. With three actors, she manages to create an enormous cast of characters and. Wolpe herself is Macbeth but she also appears as one of the witches. Nick Salomone is delightfully unctuous as Lady Macbeth and as Satan is the embodiment of evil, imaginary flames seemingly licking his buff body. And Mary Hodges brilliantly shifts back and forth between a multitude of roles, Banquo, Duncan, MacDuff and, perhaps most exquisitely, the Porter. The set is a scrap yard which seems somehow to make complete sense.
After all that talk, it was almost a relief to switch off the noise for the revival of "Small Mouth Sounds" currently running at Signature Theatre. Ironically "Small Mouth Sounds" from the playwright and actress Bess Wohl began at Here as well. Directed by Rachel Chavkin, who most recently directed"Hadestown" at NYTW, it has a cast that includes Quincy Tyler Bernstine ("10 out of 12") and Zoe Winters ("An Octoroon," "Red Speedo"). The six characters are attending a weekend retreat at an Ashram somewhere in New England. The catch is that they must be silent. Over the course of the two hour play, they expose themselves to each other and to the audience without much verbal interaction so that by the end we feel we know them and their stories better than if they had been able to speak. Although entertaining, engaging, well-acted and well-directed, it felt contrived and never dipped too far below the surface. Wohl doesn't take us on the emotional journey that Clare Barron ("You Got Older"), Anne Washburn ("10 out of 12") or Annie Baker ("The Flick") have been able to. In other words, though delightful, it didn't leave with me anything to chew on.
"Macbeth3" is a mad dash through the play we shall not name. With three actors, she manages to create an enormous cast of characters and. Wolpe herself is Macbeth but she also appears as one of the witches. Nick Salomone is delightfully unctuous as Lady Macbeth and as Satan is the embodiment of evil, imaginary flames seemingly licking his buff body. And Mary Hodges brilliantly shifts back and forth between a multitude of roles, Banquo, Duncan, MacDuff and, perhaps most exquisitely, the Porter. The set is a scrap yard which seems somehow to make complete sense.
After all that talk, it was almost a relief to switch off the noise for the revival of "Small Mouth Sounds" currently running at Signature Theatre. Ironically "Small Mouth Sounds" from the playwright and actress Bess Wohl began at Here as well. Directed by Rachel Chavkin, who most recently directed"Hadestown" at NYTW, it has a cast that includes Quincy Tyler Bernstine ("10 out of 12") and Zoe Winters ("An Octoroon," "Red Speedo"). The six characters are attending a weekend retreat at an Ashram somewhere in New England. The catch is that they must be silent. Over the course of the two hour play, they expose themselves to each other and to the audience without much verbal interaction so that by the end we feel we know them and their stories better than if they had been able to speak. Although entertaining, engaging, well-acted and well-directed, it felt contrived and never dipped too far below the surface. Wohl doesn't take us on the emotional journey that Clare Barron ("You Got Older"), Anne Washburn ("10 out of 12") or Annie Baker ("The Flick") have been able to. In other words, though delightful, it didn't leave with me anything to chew on.
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
I have seen "A Midsummer Night's Dream" more times than I can remember but each time brings something fresh. The New York Classic Theatre's production which I saw this year in Carl Schurtz Park on the far Upper East Side delights. The company does stellar productions of Shakespeare and occasionally other classics each summer in various parks around Manhattan and Brooklyn. The conceit is that we, the audience, must move with the action from spot to spot in the park. The most engaging aspect of this particular production are the "rude mechanicals" led by Nick Salamone's Peter Quince who are enlisted by Duke Theseus(the excellent Clay Storseth) to put on a production of "Pyramus and Thisbe," in particular Ian Gould who plays Bottom with enormous flair. Another device in this production which works to great effect is having the mechanicals double as Titania's creep steam punk fairies. But the highlight of the production was Montgomery Sutton as Francis Flute performing Thisbe with enormous, and I mean truly enormous, balloon breasts that prevented movement. I thought I would burst my appendix laughing. On the negative side, I could have done without the seemingly arbitrary passages of the play that were set to music and Matt Mundy's Puck was a bit ADD for my taste. But all in all a very pleasing evening with the Bard.
On the flip side, "Coriolanus" at The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey on the Drew University campus was a disappointment. The production design, to begin with, was a mess, a mash up of everything from cheap Liberace suits to bathrobes with epaulettes standing in for military attire. What were they thinking? Well, I know what they were thinking because I stayed for the Q&A with actors. They seemed to think that this made the productions "timeless." Hmmmm... The acting overall was quite good although I detest the casting of women in men's roles unless that is the intention of the production as in Phyllida Law's recent all female productions of "Henry VI" and " The Taming of the Shrew". I find it distracting and it changes the tenor of the scenes. I must give a nod to Jacqueline Antaramian who was especially fine as Volumnia, the helicopter mother of Caius Martius Coriolanus. Greg Derelian is a very good actor but as Caius Martiuis he looked too much like a character out of the "The Sopranos" for me to take him seriously. Perhaps if the costumes had not been so ridiculous ....
"Privacy" by James Graham at the Public Theatre, is a bit of fluff about the invasion of privacy in the age of the internet, initially brought to our attention by the Edward Snowden who himself appears briefly on a screen at the end of the play. I think anyone who was shocked by the "revelations" in the play probably has not been following the news since Snowden became the most famous whistleblower in the world and most definitely has not see "Citizen Four" which shocked socks off anyone who saw it. No, the subject matter of this play not longer has the power to be shocking but, as directed by Josie Rourke with a cast that includes Daniel Radcliffe of Harry Potter fame, Rachel Dratch late of SNL and many many many Amazon boxes, it is charming and extremely good fun.
On the flip side, "Coriolanus" at The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey on the Drew University campus was a disappointment. The production design, to begin with, was a mess, a mash up of everything from cheap Liberace suits to bathrobes with epaulettes standing in for military attire. What were they thinking? Well, I know what they were thinking because I stayed for the Q&A with actors. They seemed to think that this made the productions "timeless." Hmmmm... The acting overall was quite good although I detest the casting of women in men's roles unless that is the intention of the production as in Phyllida Law's recent all female productions of "Henry VI" and " The Taming of the Shrew". I find it distracting and it changes the tenor of the scenes. I must give a nod to Jacqueline Antaramian who was especially fine as Volumnia, the helicopter mother of Caius Martius Coriolanus. Greg Derelian is a very good actor but as Caius Martiuis he looked too much like a character out of the "The Sopranos" for me to take him seriously. Perhaps if the costumes had not been so ridiculous ....
"Privacy" by James Graham at the Public Theatre, is a bit of fluff about the invasion of privacy in the age of the internet, initially brought to our attention by the Edward Snowden who himself appears briefly on a screen at the end of the play. I think anyone who was shocked by the "revelations" in the play probably has not been following the news since Snowden became the most famous whistleblower in the world and most definitely has not see "Citizen Four" which shocked socks off anyone who saw it. No, the subject matter of this play not longer has the power to be shocking but, as directed by Josie Rourke with a cast that includes Daniel Radcliffe of Harry Potter fame, Rachel Dratch late of SNL and many many many Amazon boxes, it is charming and extremely good fun.
Friday, June 3, 2016
Misogyny turned upside down and going Incognito
The current production of "The Taming of the Shrew" at the Delacorte Theatre directed by Phyllida Lloyd is a curious one. In her attempt to stand the play's obvious misogyny on it's head and make it relevant for today's audience, she had cast an all female version. Unfortunately, "Shrew" is not as successful as her also all female "Henry VI" set in a women's prison in Scotland. That production had gravitas. Her "Shrew" is a bauble. There is a fine performance by Janet McTeer a Petrucio but for the most part the performances feel thrown off and slight. The best aspect of the production has nothing to do with Shakespeare at all. Lloyd frames the play with a beauty pageant hosted by Donald Trump. Kate and Bianca are contestants, of course. Then, interspersed with the action of the play, are vignettes delivered by a stand-up comic. The humor is sexist but, delivered by a woman dressed as a man, is actually mocking the current climate of sexism and misogyny of Trump's campaign. Unfortunately, during the performance I attended, there were disgruntled audience members who shouted angrily at the comic with cries of "Misogyny!" I guess they didn't get the joke.
"Incognito" at Manhattan Theatre Club is another effort from Nick Payne who wrote the excellent "Constellations." Again he incorporates the physics of time and place into a play, but this time about the brain: memory, loss of, and the actual brain of Einstein. Directed by Doug Hughes, the play asks a lot of questions: Why would a man married for 30 years murder his wife in his sleep? How can a person not remember from one moment to the next? Does the study of a human brain give us an information that we can play forward? The answer to all these questions is simply that we do not know, that we may never know. "Incognito," while thought-provoking and entertaining, doesn't have the focus of "Constellations," a two character play that applied string theory and quantum mechanics to endlessly fragment and refract the story of a relationship. Jack Gyllenhaal and Ruth Wilson's performances in that play were exquisite and more powerful than those of the current crop, with the exception of Charlie Cox who brilliantly embodies several characters over the course of the play including Henry, an amnesiac who remembers and longs for his wife Margaret but can't remember that he has seen her a moment before. Heather Lind, Morgan Spector and Geneva Carr each slip in an out of various American and British accents effortlessly but I had a hard time keeping track of their various story lines. The play is "brain" food though and I recommend the 85 minutes in the dark.
http://nyti.ms/25fR3U3
"Incognito" at Manhattan Theatre Club is another effort from Nick Payne who wrote the excellent "Constellations." Again he incorporates the physics of time and place into a play, but this time about the brain: memory, loss of, and the actual brain of Einstein. Directed by Doug Hughes, the play asks a lot of questions: Why would a man married for 30 years murder his wife in his sleep? How can a person not remember from one moment to the next? Does the study of a human brain give us an information that we can play forward? The answer to all these questions is simply that we do not know, that we may never know. "Incognito," while thought-provoking and entertaining, doesn't have the focus of "Constellations," a two character play that applied string theory and quantum mechanics to endlessly fragment and refract the story of a relationship. Jack Gyllenhaal and Ruth Wilson's performances in that play were exquisite and more powerful than those of the current crop, with the exception of Charlie Cox who brilliantly embodies several characters over the course of the play including Henry, an amnesiac who remembers and longs for his wife Margaret but can't remember that he has seen her a moment before. Heather Lind, Morgan Spector and Geneva Carr each slip in an out of various American and British accents effortlessly but I had a hard time keeping track of their various story lines. The play is "brain" food though and I recommend the 85 minutes in the dark.
http://nyti.ms/25fR3U3
Friday, May 27, 2016
A Tale of Two Plays
"It was the best of times; it was the worst of times."
I didn't expect to enjoy the new play "Indian Summer" at Playwrights Horizons as much as I did. I have been disappointed in their much touted productions by the current batch of hot young playwrights specifically Lucas Hnath's "The Christians," Anne Washburn's" Antlia Pneumatica" and Bruce Norris's "The Qualms." Smartly directed by Carolyn Cantor, the Gregory S. Moss play takes place in the Newburyport, Massachusetts, a summer beach destination for the middle class from New York and Boston. It revolves around the relationships between Daniel, a 16 year old misanthrope, who has been dumped by his mother with his quirky step-grandfather for the summer, and a local girl named Izzy. Daniel is played with great depth by Owen Campbell and Elise Kibler as the shrill townie Izzy is a revelation, shedding layers of her brittle onion skin to create a fully nuanced portrait of a young woman caught between the life she knows and her dreams. Izzy shakes the adolescent Daniel out of his loneliness and misanthropy and he discovers love. Jonathan Hadary is entertaining as Daniel's widowed step-grandfather George but his character is really a device to frame and move along the play. And Joe Tippet as Jeremy, Izzy's doltish boyfriend, provides comic relief. Don't expect Pinter or Albee (I know, I know, "Shut up already about Pinter and Albee.") but if you want an evening of light entertainment this is an option.
Unfortunately, it was a battle to make it through the first act of Branden Jacobs-Jenkins "War" at Lincoln Center's Claire Tow Theatre. "An Octoroon" at Soho was a brilliant theatrical experience but he has since disappointed with "Gloria" at the Vinyard theatre but which was, at least, watchable. Directed by Lileana Blain-Cruz, she of the dreadful "Revolt, She Said" at Soho Rep this Spring and "Red Speedo" at NYTW, the play is formulaic, dull and not enhanced by the monologues spoken directly to the audience by the coma-induced central character while the other actors crawl ape-like around the stage. Given that the playwright is "brown" and that at least one of the ape-approximators is a white actor, I guess I am not allowed to call this out at racist, but still... I don't want to do the actors the disservice of naming them as I think it would be best that they move on without this blemish on their resumes. Needless to say, even after a second glass of cheap pino grigio at intermission, I did not have the resolve to return for the second act.
Have I mentioned the lovely staged reading I saw of "Letters to Sala" at the Museum of Jewish Heritage? The play by Arlene Hutton is based on the book "Sala's Gift" by Ann Kirshner (spoiler alert: Sala's daughter) and is a stage enactment of letters that Sala received and saved while in various work camps during the Holocaust. The reading was well directed by Eric Nightengale and beautifully acted by a large cast. Sala who is well into her 90's is still alive. Keep your eye out for a future production.
Upcoming: Irish Arts Center will present a Pen, Paper, and Palate event "Eating for Health, Love, Sex, and Death" on May 31st at The Half King. There will be an esteemed panel of writers including Joel Salatin (on health), Paula Butturini (on love), Giulia Melucci (on sex), and Jon McGoran (on death), moderated by Bill Yosses, the former White House Executive Pastry Chef. And on June 7th William Doyle will read from PT 109: An American Epic of War, Survival, and the Destiny of John F. Kennedy at Irish Arts Center. This is the paperback launch of his book, originally published in October 2015. For more info and tickets go to www.irishartscenter.org/.
I didn't expect to enjoy the new play "Indian Summer" at Playwrights Horizons as much as I did. I have been disappointed in their much touted productions by the current batch of hot young playwrights specifically Lucas Hnath's "The Christians," Anne Washburn's" Antlia Pneumatica" and Bruce Norris's "The Qualms." Smartly directed by Carolyn Cantor, the Gregory S. Moss play takes place in the Newburyport, Massachusetts, a summer beach destination for the middle class from New York and Boston. It revolves around the relationships between Daniel, a 16 year old misanthrope, who has been dumped by his mother with his quirky step-grandfather for the summer, and a local girl named Izzy. Daniel is played with great depth by Owen Campbell and Elise Kibler as the shrill townie Izzy is a revelation, shedding layers of her brittle onion skin to create a fully nuanced portrait of a young woman caught between the life she knows and her dreams. Izzy shakes the adolescent Daniel out of his loneliness and misanthropy and he discovers love. Jonathan Hadary is entertaining as Daniel's widowed step-grandfather George but his character is really a device to frame and move along the play. And Joe Tippet as Jeremy, Izzy's doltish boyfriend, provides comic relief. Don't expect Pinter or Albee (I know, I know, "Shut up already about Pinter and Albee.") but if you want an evening of light entertainment this is an option.
Unfortunately, it was a battle to make it through the first act of Branden Jacobs-Jenkins "War" at Lincoln Center's Claire Tow Theatre. "An Octoroon" at Soho was a brilliant theatrical experience but he has since disappointed with "Gloria" at the Vinyard theatre but which was, at least, watchable. Directed by Lileana Blain-Cruz, she of the dreadful "Revolt, She Said" at Soho Rep this Spring and "Red Speedo" at NYTW, the play is formulaic, dull and not enhanced by the monologues spoken directly to the audience by the coma-induced central character while the other actors crawl ape-like around the stage. Given that the playwright is "brown" and that at least one of the ape-approximators is a white actor, I guess I am not allowed to call this out at racist, but still... I don't want to do the actors the disservice of naming them as I think it would be best that they move on without this blemish on their resumes. Needless to say, even after a second glass of cheap pino grigio at intermission, I did not have the resolve to return for the second act.
Have I mentioned the lovely staged reading I saw of "Letters to Sala" at the Museum of Jewish Heritage? The play by Arlene Hutton is based on the book "Sala's Gift" by Ann Kirshner (spoiler alert: Sala's daughter) and is a stage enactment of letters that Sala received and saved while in various work camps during the Holocaust. The reading was well directed by Eric Nightengale and beautifully acted by a large cast. Sala who is well into her 90's is still alive. Keep your eye out for a future production.
Upcoming: Irish Arts Center will present a Pen, Paper, and Palate event "Eating for Health, Love, Sex, and Death" on May 31st at The Half King. There will be an esteemed panel of writers including Joel Salatin (on health), Paula Butturini (on love), Giulia Melucci (on sex), and Jon McGoran (on death), moderated by Bill Yosses, the former White House Executive Pastry Chef. And on June 7th William Doyle will read from PT 109: An American Epic of War, Survival, and the Destiny of John F. Kennedy at Irish Arts Center. This is the paperback launch of his book, originally published in October 2015. For more info and tickets go to www.irishartscenter.org/.
Monday, May 9, 2016
Blood, Sweat and Tears
"American Psycho," based on the 25 year old best seller by Bret Easton Ellis, and directed by Rubert Goold whose most recent works on Broadway were "King Charles III" and "Enron," is one of the most joyously campy Broadway productions I have ever seen. I last saw Benjamin Walker in "Bloody, Bloody Andrew Jackson" at The Public where his beefy physique matched Jackson's grab-life-by-tail persona. Here he has toned up and is all sharp edges. The psychotic Patrick Bateman is about as far removed from the lusty young bounder Andrew Jackson as one can get. Bateman is a serial killer disguised by day as a metrosexual Wall Street trader. He is directionless, unhappy and, ultimately, empty. The only way he can feel anything is in the act of killing. The music by Duncan Sheik relies heavily on 90's dance music and the sets by Es Devlin (thankfully there is no rotating set here, something she has a penchant for) have the antiseptic feel of a high end minimalist hotel. The play is bloody, of course, and there are several entertaining performances but really the show is all Benjamin Walker who we can't tear our eyes off of.
Gillian Anderson is "A Streetcar Names Desire." Apart from her performance everything else falls away. The production is not helped by the distracting slowly revolving stage which made me think that the set design was once again by Es Devlin who used this device in the recent "A Doll House" at BAM and "Machinal" on Broadway. But no, this time we have Magda Willi to thank. The Young Vic production is directed by Benedict Andrews who brought the stunning production of "The Maids" with Isabelle Huppert and Cate Blanchett to the Lincoln Center Festival last summer. Gillian Anderson certainly has the chops to play the doomed and tragic Blanche. This Blanche is beautiful and fierce, aware that she is self-deluding until the moment she loses everything. The other performances, which I found decent but workmanlike, faded into the revolving woodwork. Ben Foster's much touted literally apelike performance of Stanley hardly compares with Brando's memorable turn on screen (and on stage too, I expect). He lacks the sex-appeal that makes us understand why Stella is so drawn to him and there was little real chemistry between him and Vanessa Kirby as Stella who is missing the earthiness of Kim Hunter. Corey Johnson as Mitch was more effecting but I can never get Karl Malden out of my head. But "Stop the set! I want to get off."
The delightful new Anais Mitchell musical "Hadestown" at New York Theatre Workshop is a hot ticket. I can see it going on to a lengthier run and becoming a moneymaker for NYTW. "Hadestown" was originally an album by Ms. Mitchell. I was there on opening night and the audience was packed with beautiful young people, presumably actors, who seemed to know all the words. The direction by Rachel Chavkin ("Natasha, Pierre and the Great Comet of 1812" and "Small Mouth Sounds") was precise and perfect. This tale of Orpheus and Eurydice could easily have been reduced to a sloppy "Godspell" wanna-be but it is tighter, deeper. I cannot single out a performance because they all were excellent. Damon Daunno as Orpheus has a voice so similar to the late Jeff Buckley's that it's chilling and the Brazilian actress Nabiyah Be as Eurydice may just be one of then most stunningly beautiful performers to grace the New York stage. The chorus of singer/musicians, Lulu Fall, Shaina Taub and Jessie Shelton, all of whom I have seen recently off-Broadway in different productions, form a wonderful musical coven, each unique in her own way. The voice of Patrick Page is a low rumble like the underworld Hades he is named for and it was delicious to see Amber Gray after her turn as the lead in Branden Jacob-Jenkins' "An Octoroon" here as Persephone. But Chris Sullivan's Hermes comes close to stealing the night as he prances around the stage, leading the unlucky lovers to their fate. He is the emcee to end all emcees. If you don't know the album, I suggest you get it as that will be easier than getting a ticket to the show. Watch out "Hamilton!"
Gillian Anderson is "A Streetcar Names Desire." Apart from her performance everything else falls away. The production is not helped by the distracting slowly revolving stage which made me think that the set design was once again by Es Devlin who used this device in the recent "A Doll House" at BAM and "Machinal" on Broadway. But no, this time we have Magda Willi to thank. The Young Vic production is directed by Benedict Andrews who brought the stunning production of "The Maids" with Isabelle Huppert and Cate Blanchett to the Lincoln Center Festival last summer. Gillian Anderson certainly has the chops to play the doomed and tragic Blanche. This Blanche is beautiful and fierce, aware that she is self-deluding until the moment she loses everything. The other performances, which I found decent but workmanlike, faded into the revolving woodwork. Ben Foster's much touted literally apelike performance of Stanley hardly compares with Brando's memorable turn on screen (and on stage too, I expect). He lacks the sex-appeal that makes us understand why Stella is so drawn to him and there was little real chemistry between him and Vanessa Kirby as Stella who is missing the earthiness of Kim Hunter. Corey Johnson as Mitch was more effecting but I can never get Karl Malden out of my head. But "Stop the set! I want to get off."
The delightful new Anais Mitchell musical "Hadestown" at New York Theatre Workshop is a hot ticket. I can see it going on to a lengthier run and becoming a moneymaker for NYTW. "Hadestown" was originally an album by Ms. Mitchell. I was there on opening night and the audience was packed with beautiful young people, presumably actors, who seemed to know all the words. The direction by Rachel Chavkin ("Natasha, Pierre and the Great Comet of 1812" and "Small Mouth Sounds") was precise and perfect. This tale of Orpheus and Eurydice could easily have been reduced to a sloppy "Godspell" wanna-be but it is tighter, deeper. I cannot single out a performance because they all were excellent. Damon Daunno as Orpheus has a voice so similar to the late Jeff Buckley's that it's chilling and the Brazilian actress Nabiyah Be as Eurydice may just be one of then most stunningly beautiful performers to grace the New York stage. The chorus of singer/musicians, Lulu Fall, Shaina Taub and Jessie Shelton, all of whom I have seen recently off-Broadway in different productions, form a wonderful musical coven, each unique in her own way. The voice of Patrick Page is a low rumble like the underworld Hades he is named for and it was delicious to see Amber Gray after her turn as the lead in Branden Jacob-Jenkins' "An Octoroon" here as Persephone. But Chris Sullivan's Hermes comes close to stealing the night as he prances around the stage, leading the unlucky lovers to their fate. He is the emcee to end all emcees. If you don't know the album, I suggest you get it as that will be easier than getting a ticket to the show. Watch out "Hamilton!"
Sunday, April 24, 2016
Thrilling Heights and Disappointments
I had the real pleasure to see David Tennant exercise his acting muscle as "Richard II" at BAM last week. Those of you who know him only from his stint as the 7th(?) "Dr. Who" and/or the widely acclaimed but somewhat disappointing British and American versions of "Broadchurch" on television, would have been amazed to see his transformation into probably the nuttiest king in the Shakespeare History plays. He devastates. Is that a verb? We watch as he morphs from a spoiled foppish king to one, who at his death, might have been a real power. When, upon his return from battles in Ireland, he finds has been conquered by his cousin, the future Henry IV, he realizes for perhaps the first time that he is mortal: "For God's sake, let us sit upon the ground and tell sad stories of the death of kings..."
Alex Hassell was excellent as well as the young king in "Henry V" although the play is all battle and not to everyone's taste. Henry V was the human king as opposed to Richard II's spoiled popinjay and Henry VI's brutish conqueror. In "Henry VI" parts 1 and 2 (which I did not see this time around having just seen Harriet Walter in Phyllida Lloyd's inventive all-female production at Saint Ann's Warehouse) Prince Hal matures from a feckless boy to the king he will become in "Henry V." He was the people's king and we finally get a taste of this in "Henry V" when he visits his dispirited men on the eve of the Battle of Agincourt in disguise. He brings with him "a little touch of Harry in the night" and it is enough to lift them up to win one of the great military battles in English History.
Both productions from the RSC are well if not exactly imaginatively directed by Gregory Doran and the performances were all excellent except for a few scenes with a mumbling Jane Lapotaire as Queen Isobel in "Henry V" who unfortunately seems past her sell-by date. She fared slightly better as the Duchess of Gloucester in "Richard II." Oliver Ford Davies was a curious but fine Chorus in "Henry V" shambling on an off the stage in professorial gear, a baggy sweater and glasses, which was not in keeping with the otherwise period aspect of the play. And I did quite enjoy the Elizabethan music that framed both plays, especially the three Sopranos in "Richard II."
On a low note, Anne Washburn's "Antlia Pneumatica" (literally "Air Pump", don't ask) at Playwright's Horizons was a disappointment. Washburn's "10 Out of 12" at Soho Rep was one of my top three favorite plays last year. Unfortunately "Antlia Pneumatica," friends gathering at a country house to memorialize a dead friend as in "The Big Chill," seemed directionless. I enjoyed the first half of the play because her characters are always so unique and wonderful and her dialogue is snappy but the play went nowhere really and the ending, or lack thereof, left the audience confused. Perhaps that was her intention but for the purposes of this play it didn't cut it. The performances were mostly excellent, especially Annie Parisse as Nina, but Rob Campbell as Adrian, her one-time lover, wasn't able to deliver on the charisma that his character required. The character was also saddled with a bizarre Sam Shepard-like monologue that he couldn't quite finesse.
I'm afraid the "Revolt, She Said" by Alice Birch at the Soho Rep was a complete mess, a feministic harangue with, once again, a trashing of the stage. Hellooooo??? Directors???? Find some other way to depict chaos please. This is getting really old.
Alex Hassell was excellent as well as the young king in "Henry V" although the play is all battle and not to everyone's taste. Henry V was the human king as opposed to Richard II's spoiled popinjay and Henry VI's brutish conqueror. In "Henry VI" parts 1 and 2 (which I did not see this time around having just seen Harriet Walter in Phyllida Lloyd's inventive all-female production at Saint Ann's Warehouse) Prince Hal matures from a feckless boy to the king he will become in "Henry V." He was the people's king and we finally get a taste of this in "Henry V" when he visits his dispirited men on the eve of the Battle of Agincourt in disguise. He brings with him "a little touch of Harry in the night" and it is enough to lift them up to win one of the great military battles in English History.
Both productions from the RSC are well if not exactly imaginatively directed by Gregory Doran and the performances were all excellent except for a few scenes with a mumbling Jane Lapotaire as Queen Isobel in "Henry V" who unfortunately seems past her sell-by date. She fared slightly better as the Duchess of Gloucester in "Richard II." Oliver Ford Davies was a curious but fine Chorus in "Henry V" shambling on an off the stage in professorial gear, a baggy sweater and glasses, which was not in keeping with the otherwise period aspect of the play. And I did quite enjoy the Elizabethan music that framed both plays, especially the three Sopranos in "Richard II."
On a low note, Anne Washburn's "Antlia Pneumatica" (literally "Air Pump", don't ask) at Playwright's Horizons was a disappointment. Washburn's "10 Out of 12" at Soho Rep was one of my top three favorite plays last year. Unfortunately "Antlia Pneumatica," friends gathering at a country house to memorialize a dead friend as in "The Big Chill," seemed directionless. I enjoyed the first half of the play because her characters are always so unique and wonderful and her dialogue is snappy but the play went nowhere really and the ending, or lack thereof, left the audience confused. Perhaps that was her intention but for the purposes of this play it didn't cut it. The performances were mostly excellent, especially Annie Parisse as Nina, but Rob Campbell as Adrian, her one-time lover, wasn't able to deliver on the charisma that his character required. The character was also saddled with a bizarre Sam Shepard-like monologue that he couldn't quite finesse.
I'm afraid the "Revolt, She Said" by Alice Birch at the Soho Rep was a complete mess, a feministic harangue with, once again, a trashing of the stage. Hellooooo??? Directors???? Find some other way to depict chaos please. This is getting really old.
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