Friday, January 30, 2009

Architecting

GRADE: B-



Created by The TEAM. Directed by Rachel Chavkin. The Public Theatre, then PS122. Through Feb. 15.

With the exception of Time Out New York's Helen Shaw (more on that later), critics respond to The TEAM's piece about New Orleans, architecture and the history of race relations warmly. Everyone has kind things to say about The TEAM's Kristin Sieh (who also got high marks for her performance in St. Joan of the Stockyards at PS 122 a few years back) and all complain that the 2.5 hour show is too long. Shaw is the only reviewer to take offense at the play's casting of a white actors to play African American roles, including a slave, while Ben Brantley at the Times appreciates the " affecting case" the play makes "for the enduring appeal of Gone With the Wind". UPDATE: this show's grade dropped from a B to a B- due to one extremely negative review from The New Yorker.



Backstage A- (Lisa Jo Sagolla) A delightfully disjointed assemblage of actively staged parodic scenes conflating characters and settings from Gone With the Wind with modern-day Southerners, Hollywood types, and intellectuals, Architecting is a riveting examination of American attitudes about race, homes, money, and gumption.

The New York Times B+
(Ben Brantley) At over two and a half hours “Architecting” can seem as sprawling and long-winded as Mitchell’s novel. This show never met an idea it didn’t like. But as it considers, with a refreshing lack of judgment, just what allows people to survive catastrophe (Example A being the dauntless Scarlett), Architecting acquires a poignancy and humanity that make it more than a play of ideas. (The play also makes a smart and affecting case for the enduring appeal of Gone With the Wind.) And some sequences, especially those between Ms. Sieh and Mr. Boyd in the second act, quietly summon entire lives of everyday loss.

Village Voice B+
(Angela Ashman) Architecting—a bold, compelling collaborative piece by the TEAM and the National Theatre of Scotland running at Under the Radar—begins with Carrie, an idealistic New York architect who arrives in New Orleans to develop a "real American community" out of the post-Katrina rubble... Tackling such hefty issues as racism and the failures of reconstruction in New Orleans, the TEAM successfully does so without cynicism. Unfortunately, they take more than two and a half hours to do it. Despite being full of fun surprises, the work could use some trimming to make it sparkle like the belle of the ball.

That Sounds Cool B
(Aaron Riccio) The vibrant, energetic TEAM looks at America again, this time building a story from the "thermodynamic history" of a world influenced by a fictional Gone With the Wind past. Even with an architectural center, the four narrative "walls" can be jarring (and over-long), but just as the characters of Architecting take what they can from "history," savvy theatergoers will find things to admire, or at least goggle at, here....Under Rachel Chavkin's well-orchestrated direction, the visual result is similar to that of the Elevator Repair Service; the difference is that while ERS's flair is rooted solidly in language, the TEAM is hardly going by the book (let alone word for word). In any case, it makes for an exciting romp, driven by a cohesive ensemble and lacking only a follow-through for the audience. While Architecting fulfills the TEAM's definition of architecture ("that the building have a strong sense of identity"), what with all the moving walls and gaping plot holes, it's not easily inhabited by the average theatergoer.

CurtainUp B
(Jenny Sandman) This is an ambitious play, and its true genius lies in the characters created by the TEAM, a group of theatre artists who bonded as freshmen at NYU many years ago. Their Margaret Mitchell ismy favorite character—the stereotypical Atlantan with a sugar-sweet voice hiding a spine of steel.... For all the clevern postmodern interactions, however, the story itself is one act too long. While the first act is full of energy and surprises, the second act falls flat and fails to capitalize on the quiet poetry of the first. The overall momentum sputters to a halt long before the actual ending. The real reason to see this play is to see the TEAM in action. After all, where else can you see men in corsets dancing to "Dixie?"

Show Showdown B-
(Patrick Lee) Although overlong, and not always smoothly staged, Architecting is captivating mostly because it's uncomfortable - its high-minded ruminations on how we construct history don't go down easy when they play out in scenes such as the one (adapted from the novel) where Scarlett O'Hara defends a slave from the verbal abuse of a Yankee woman. If such scenes aim to show us nuance and contradiction, or the "truth of the times", they backfired for me. To use Gone With The Wind for its place in the American consciousness is one thing, but to invest in it as truth is another.

Time Out NY D+
(Helen Shaw) For a young company, nothing hurts like success. Already, Rachel Chavkin and her TEAM collective have had a flurry of well-deserved attention. A year ago, their delightful Particularly in the Heartland used pastiche, audience interaction and the staggeringly talented Kristin Sieh to unpack a whole picnic basket of Midwestern clichés. So could it just be elevated expectations that make their sprawling, occasionally offensive Architecting such a disappointment?

The New Yorker F
(Unsigned) The experimental theatre group the TEAM, in this nearly three-hour-long, overstuffed, and self-indulgent mashup of “Gone with the Wind” and post-Katrina New Orleans, mistakes naïveté for sincerity. In their hands, contemporary American experience consists solely of clichéd provincialism, bad Southern accents, twee musical breaks, and pretentious monologues about “force” and “history” that read like a college term paper.

BS A- 12; NYT B+ 11; VV B+ 11; TSC B 10; CU B 10; SS B- 9; TONY D+ 5; TNY F 1; TOTAL = 69/8=8.63 = B-
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Looking for the Pony

GRADE: B

By Andrea Lepcio. Directed by Stephan Golux. Vital Theatre Company at the McGinn/Cazale Theatre. (CLOSED)

This comedy/drama about breast cancer, which Andrea Lepcio has expanded to a full-length from its original form as a 20-minute short, garners its share of champions in thrall to its humor and heart in the face of a grim theme. A clutch of detractors, however, find it undramatic, hollow, "sub-Lifetime." All the critics note the talent of lead actors Dierdre O'Connell and J. Smith-Cameron, though whether they feel the performers perfectly suit or overmatch the material depends on their opinion of the play. We must give special points to Variety's Sam Thielman for getting a very specific quibble off his, er, chest.


The New York Times A
(Anita Gates) When you’re in the audience at a play about breast cancer, you don’t expect to laugh a lot. Or to enjoy the sweet taste of victory...You could criticize Ms. Lepcio’s play because her two major characters are so unfailingly nice — noble, unselfish, cheerful and clean. But maybe they have to be; everything they encounter together is so difficult...Both Ms. Smith-Cameron, perhaps best known for her star turn in “As Bees in Honey Drown,” and Ms. O’Connell give glowing, dignified, heartfelt performances, directed without a trace of sentimentality by Stephan Golux. The lead characters’ moral perfection is offset, sometimes hilariously, by the assortment of men and women played by Ms. Funk and Mr. Sanyal.

Nytheatre.com A
(Martin Denton) Gorgeous, wise, and moving play...Lepcio has taken several years to expand Looking for the Pony into a full-length piece and there is risk associated with an endeavor like that—to take something that's simple and pure at 20 minutes in length and understand how to enlarge and transform it into something that's 90 minutes long and just as simple and pure. She has succeeded. The new play is like the old one, but different too. They both deserve space in the dramatic canon.

CurtainUp A-
(Amy Krivohlavek) Andrea Lepcio's wry, witty, and warm play Looking for the Pony offers keen insights on illness by focusing on the relationship between two sisters, one of whom develops breast cancer. Don't be scared off by the subject matter. Under the keen direction of Stephan Golux, it's the sisters' enduring relationship, not the illness, that forms the heart of the play, and J. Smith-Cameron and Deirdre O'Connell turn in riveting performances that should not be missed...Throwing humor in the face of illness is nothing new, but the synchronicity and precise rhythms of these two actresses make the comedy percolate from a relentlessly truthful place. Lepcio's writing often seems to sing as the actresses finish each other's sentences and embrace the unique cadences of their relationship.

New York Post B+
(Frank Scheck) Moving and funny play about two sisters' deepening bond when one of them is stricken with cancer...While the theme suggests many a Lifetime movie, playwright Andrea Lepcio and director Stephan Golux infuse the proceedings with enough imaginative theatricality and emotional power to transcend the familiarity of the material...Enlivening the proceedings are absurdist touches - as when Lauren's lawyer engages in a literal wrestling match with her insurance company rep to procure a bigger settlement...Smith-Cameron and O'Connell are two of our most reliable stage actresses, and they don't disappoint here with their deeply moving portrayals.

Backstage B+
(Karl Levett) The playwright is lucky indeed to have J. Smith-Cameron and Deirdre O'Connell playing the lead characters...Both combine consummate skill with individual charm. So here in Lepcio's tender but grimly stark drama, we get two for the price of one...The women share a strong sisterly bond that's tested as cancer becomes the other principal character. The play's poignancy is in the fact that the bond is not found wanting. For once we witness a family relationship that is truly functional...The story spirals down as anti-dramatic inevitability sets in, and we have only the sisters' devotion left to hold our interest. Unfortunately, terminal illnesses have a way of taking over plays as well as lives...Stephan Golux directs with a firm hand, combining pace and pleasing restraint.

Theatermania C+
(Adam R. Perlman) If you or a loved one has struggled with cancer, then gathering in a room to see it painfully re-enacted in the Vital Theatre's production of Andrea Lepcio's Looking for the Pony, now at the McGinn/Cazale Theatre, may be a consoling experience. Others, however, may find the work more effective as therapy than theater. In its favor, Looking for the Pony has more vitality than the average soggy entry in the genre...The interplay of the work's disparate elements--direct address, tearful realism, and comic relief--is neither comfortably conceived in Lepcio's writing nor realized in Stephan Golux's ill-paced direction. Over time, the strained attempts at quirky theatricality are abandoned, and the play becomes more and more about the slog to the grave. In the process, Looking for the Pony wastes the talents of Smith-Cameron and O'Connell.

Variety C
(Sam Thielman) It's not easy to criticize a play about cancer, but sometimes it's necessary: Andrea Lepcio's tenderhearted, emptyheaded four-hander offers little besides schmaltzy platitudes and unpleasant caricatures of everyone who is not our hero (a writer, of course) or her sister, who is dying of breast cancer. But (and it's a large "but," thankfully) J. Smith-Cameron and Deirdre O'Connell are so wonderful in the lead roles that the piece remains watchable, even occasionally moving...Someone should probably sit down with helmer Stephan Golux and costumer Matthew Hemesath and gently explain to them what a mastectomy is--O'Connell spends the entire play, pre- and post-op, wearing a low-cut blouse, and faces stage right when she and her sister are examining her missing breast (which is clearly still there).

Time Out NY D
(Adam Feldman) It is not a good sign, in a play about a dying woman, when the audience starts rooting for the breast cancer. This occurs by the halfway mark of Looking for the Pony. A much shorter version of Andrea Lepcio’s excruciating drama was staged in 2002 as part of Vital Theatre Company’s Vital Signs series, and the playwright has now expanded it into a one-act. But the piece hasn’t been fleshed out; it has merely been padded up. It’s a 20-minute play in a fat suit...Smith-Cameron and O’Connell are very fine actors, and it is embarrassing to watch them deliver dialogue that ranges from the banal to the bathetic...Despite occasional halfhearted stabs at absurdist exaggeration, this is basically a manipulative sub-Lifetime weeper.

NYT A 13; Nytheatre.com A 13; CurtainUp A- 12; NY Post B+ 11; Backstage B+ 11; Theatermania C+ 8; Variety C 7; Time Out NY D 4; 79/8=9.88 (B)
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Thursday, January 29, 2009

Cornbury: The Queen's Governor

GRADE: B

By William M. Hoffman and Anthony Holland. Directed by Tim Cusack. Theatre Askew at the Hudson Guild Theatre. (CLOSED)

Inspired by a possibly apocryphal piece of New York history involving a cross-dressing English colonial governor, Cornbury divides critics with its blend of Ridiculous Theatre-style camp, farce, and queer politics. All the critics praise David Greenspan's turn in the lead role, and most similarly enjoyed Everett Quinton's performance as the heavy; but while many enjoyed those elements so much they're willing to overlook the play's dramaturgical flaws, others are not so forgiving, finding the show a shticky grab bag well past its expiration date. A favorite quote, from the eminently quotable Trav S.D.: "As an amateur historian, I am proud to say I didn’t learn a thing."


Offoffonline A
(Adrienne Cea) Greenspan has a playful nature and a charming magnetism. He appears to be having fun with his eccentric character, much to the credit of Holland and Hoffman’s witty dialogue, costume designer, Jeffrey Wallach’s exaggerated gowns and set designer, Mark Beard’s unique scenery all of which give him great material to have fun with...Watching Greenspan glide across the stage draped in outrageous fashion designs also delivers a series of hilarious visuals.

Time Out NY A-
(Adam Feldman) On David Greenspan’s lips, every line of dialogue is a little lemon drop, and his pucker doubles as a kiss. He is a specialist in dryly tangy gay camp, and his skills are put to ample use in Cornbury...William M. Hoffman and Anthony Holland’s script is like a winking companion piece to Derek Jarman’s aggro-queer Edward II; it has a goofy, anything-goes spirit, matched by Tim Cusack’s likably ramshackle production. And although the party goes on too long—the show’s corset could use 30 minutes of tightening—you’ll have a gay old time.

Backstage A-
(Leonard Jacobs) As he minces, flounces, and flits, watching David Greenspan as Edward Hyde--history recalls him as Lord Cornbury, the cross-dressing colonial governor of New York and New Jersey from 1702 to 1708--is a trés gay fey treat...The idea behind Theatre Askew's whimsical production is that something meaningful and contemporary can be gleaned from this fantasia about a footnote in the annals of sexuality...Musical numbers bog down its campy speed, emphasizing that not all in the cast reach the Ridiculous heights achieved by Greenspan and Quinton. It's not just Greenspan's fiendish way with a saucy quip ("How the French worship the enema"), but the pleasure taken in queer madness, divinely told.

Travalanche A-
(Trav S.D.) I’m glad to report the product was everything I hoped for and more. Greenspan, of course, is only ever and always himself, but this role makes an ideal setting for the jewel that he is. Luxuriating around the space, eyelids halfway drawn, sculpting the atmosphere with his hands as he sings out orders to his obedient and put-upon minions, Greenspan’s Cornbury is every inch a Queen. Quinton, who’s played his fair share of similar characters too, acquits himself no less favorably as the nasty, prudish Dutch clergyman Pastor Van Dam...Furthermore, the cast also includes someone named Eugene the Poogene...The play is terrific in details – the speech is exquisitely accurate and full of double entendre. But as a whole it is somewhat formless, with Cornbury being “dethroned” at the end of the first act, leaving the entire post-intermission as an anti-climax.

CurtainUp B+
(Elyse Sommer) If the late Charles Ludlum's [sic] Ridiculous Theater was before your time, the Theatre Askew's presentation of this fantasy about an actual historical figure is your chance to experience some of what made Ludlum's [sic] theater something of a downtown cult venture...Greenspan is very much the evening's star...As part of the Dutch contingent Everett Quinton is hilarious as the pious but bigoted pastor Van Dam...While things often get too shticky and not all the actors match Greenspan and Quinton's bravura performances, set and costume designers Mark Beard and Jeffrey have managed to bring the flavor of the period to the small stage.

New York Times B
(Charles Isherwood) The camp-as-Christmas style of the show, directed by Tim Cusack for Theater Askew, recalls the heady frolics of Charles Ludlam, the playwright and actor who led the Ridiculous Theatrical Company for two decades before his death in 1987. In the person of Everett Quinton, who plays a righteous Dutch pastor bent on wresting power from the sartorially wayward governor, the production boasts a direct link to that brilliant company. Mr. Quinton was Mr. Ludlam’s longtime partner and frequent co-star, and his fire-breathing oratory and angry expectorations in quasi-Dutch provide some of the funniest moments in the show. And in David Greenspan, the marvelously odd downtown actor who plays the title role, the play has an interpreter more than equal to the task of imbuing a historical footnote with theatrical allure...But the colorful performances cannot distract you from the play’s potholed surface and the often long pauses between good gags. The scenes seem to be arrayed almost at random, and the story meanders in unnecessary directions.

New Theatre Corps B
(Jason Fitzgerald) In this example of what Hoffman calls “revanchist revisionist history, or history as…it should have been,” the Lord Cornbury becomes a queer comic-book hero...This project of deconstruction by theatrical silliness was once exemplified by the late Charles Ludlam’s Theatre of the Ridiculous, to whose aesthetic Cornbury owes an obvious debt...And director Tim Cusack is wise to cast Everett Quinton, Ludlam’s partner and heir, as the Puritan pastor. But the rest of the ensemble struggles with the self-conscious style of the Ridiculous, despite glimpses of success in Ashley Bryant (as Hyde’s African slave) and Julia Campanelli (as his besotted wife)...As a theatrical experience, it reveals the potential of Hoffman and Holland’s play while leaving space for a more definitive production in the future.

Village Voice B-
(Alexis Soloski) David Greenspan, no stranger to feminine adornments on the stage, gives a delightful turn in the titular role. His Cornbury is teasing, charming, infuriating, and a dab hand with an épée. And Everett Quinton and Bianca Leigh have a fine time as the grim Dutch who oppose him. Mark Beard's set, a marvel of trompe l'oeil absurdity, deserves royal praise. Yet the show's not nearly as much fun as these impish performances and scenery should allow. Much of director Tim Cusack's supporting cast perform it too hestitantly [sic}, and the script is unbearably wordy—though it does contain the unusual and succinct insult, "Go fuck a beaver."

Theatermania C+
(Dan Balcazo) Greenspan delivers just the right combination of haughtiness and camp, even if he doesn't look very attractive in the dresses that costume designer Jeffrey Wallach has outfitted him in -- particularly the cheap-looking blue gown that he initially wears. Quinton plays his part broadly, but with an intensity that makes him both funny and mesmerizing...On the downside, several of the supporting players are incredibly weak...Much of the blame has to be laid at the feet of director Tim Cusack, who has not been able to guide his company of actors in a coherent performance style. The production is also hampered by Mark Beard's set design.

American Theatre Web C
(Andy Propst) Neither the script nor Tim Cusack's staging manage to satisfyingly meld two diametrically opposed views of the Cornbury tale. The play and the production are certainly graced by a number of gifted actors who give first-rate performances. As Cornbury, David Greenspan delivers a deliciously mercurial performance that's a mix of drag queen camp and well-observed naturalism. His ability to wed such distinct styles into his performance is what gives the piece genuine heft...Unfortunately, sermonizing creeps in, as Cornbury's persecution and eventual imprisonment is condemned as being both politically, and more dangerously, philosophically, motivated...Just as the play and performances experience a curious sort of disconnect, so too do the visual elements of the production.

Show Showdown C-
(Patrick Lee) This campy farcical comedy (by Anthony Holland and William M. Hoffman) depicts him as a silly lavender-scented fop whose lavish wardrobe bills nearly bankrupt the city. He's meant to be someone we cheer for, as the small minded Dutch citizens all but light torches to storm the Governor's mansion, but the play's sensibilities are decades out of date and lack any naughty kick: we're past cheering cross dressing for its own sake, especially when it's as cutified as it is here and divorced of sexuality...David Greenspan's performance has some appeal.

Variety D+
(Sam Thielman) David Greenspan is a perfect lady as the title character in Theater Askew's new production, but Tim Cusack's direction is hysterical in the worst possible way. William M. Hoffman and the late Anthony Holland may even have written a good play, who knows? It's impossible to understand a word of it here over the production's assaultive crassness. Arguably the most frustrating thing about "Cornbury" is the potential for a very funny deconstruction of 18th-century restoration comedy, glimpsed every now and then in Greenspan's foppish perf and in Julia Campanelli's occasionally cute turn as his governor's klepto wife.

Offoffonline A 13; TONY A- 12; Backstage A- 12; Travalanche A- 12; CurtainUp B+ 11; NY Times B 10; New Theatre Corps B 9; Village Voice B- 9; Theatermania C+ 8; American Theatre Web C 7; Just Shows To Go You C- 6; Variety D+ 5; TOTAL: 115/12=9.58 (B)
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Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Krapp, 39

GRADE: A/A-


By Michael Laurence. Directed by George Demas. SoHo Playhouse. Through Apr. 5.

Critics don't just admire Michael Laurence's chutzpah in riffing on Beckett's Krapp's Last Tape with his own ironically self-involved multimedia solo show--they also mostly adore the results, in which Laurence uses journals and answering machine messages, among other personal effects, to create a resonant, and, critics say, quasi-Beckettian hall of mirrors.


Nytheatre.com A+
(Martin Denton) Laurence's smart, funny, wise, and profound riff on/response to Samuel Beckett's Krapp's Last Tape...It's a rich, ripe stimulating work that's as rewarding to ponder afterward as it is to experience.

Variety A
(Sam Thielman) The show--gorgeously directed by George Demas, and mostly composed of the author-performer's journal entries, phone calls and personal correspondence--is simply Laurence sticking a pin into his own self-importance and watching it deflate time and again...Arrogance and self-regard are always a risk in a one-man show; in "Krapp, 39," Laurence flees so quickly to the opposite extreme that his show is a complete surprise--and thus, hilarious. It's the same impulse that propelled Beckett's bleak play, and like his spiritual ancestor, Laurence has produced a priceless artifact.

New Yorker A
Michael Laurence’s well-written and expertly performed solo piece, directed by George Demas, is the actor’s response to Beckett’s “Krapp’s Last Tape,” and its themes of “love, loss, art, death, and bananas"...Laurence creates a funny and lacerating self-portrait that earns its affiliation with the classic that inspired it.

That Sounds Cool A
(Aaron Riccio) Laurence's grant-worthy term for Krapp, 39 is "an autobiographical 'documentary' theater piece," but in truth, it is neither a history nor a premonition, and it is all the stronger for that. Krapp is a sort of shield, in which an actor can visit the deep themes of love and death and, especially, loss. Stripped of that role--"Take the character away from the actor and what does he have?"--and there's a far greater existential dread...and, as Beckett so wisely observed, a certain special comedy, too.

Gothamist A
(John Del Signore) A work of brave and vulnerable beauty that succeeds despite its seemingly off-putting subject matter. That Laurence somehow coaxes the audience to care about and even identify with a floundering New York theater actor speaks volumes about his warmth and charm—which is doubly impressive considering he usually gets cast as the homeless drifter...The well-paced production at Soho Playhouse is speckled with self-deprecating humor and thoughtful considerations on time and aging.

Flavorwire A
(Anne Fenton) Lawrence (sic) uses the concept of Beckett’s famed monologue to reconsider various periods of his own life, and to reflect upon his desires for the future...Lawrence walks a fine line between self-exploration and self-obsession, but he manages to keep his audience interested and engaged. His insights and anecdotes about both Krapp and himself are variously hilarious and devastating, uplifting and sobering. All in all, it’s a great piece of theater.

Time Out NY A
(David Cote) Michael Laurence, possessed of princely good looks and a poet’s tenor, seems no stranger to his mirror, but the writer-performer also knows how to mine the comic underside of artistic self-absorption. His deceptively fatuous Krapp, 39 starts with the actor’s genuine desire to record himself delivering a speech that is played back in Samuel Beckett’s Krapp’s Last Tape...The actor and his shrewd director, George Demas, deftly navigate the pathos and satire in the navel-gazing setup...The result is a moving and wise 70-minute retrospective of a man’s soul, an homage to the self that somehow doesn’t feel selfish.

Theatermania B+
(Andy Propst) Often fascinating...In his efforts to shape his piece, Laurence has assembled a wide range of materials: there are journal entries from previous birthdays dating back 20 years, an unearthed message from an answering machine from his dead mother, and--to enhance the ironic quotient of the piece--phone conversations with his capable director, George Demas...Slowly, the piece turns into a rich and brutally honest examination of a life at mid-point.

New York Post B+
(Frank Scheck) It takes nerve to mine the same territory as Samuel Beckett, but Michael Laurence pulls it off...It is a moving and funny examination of the loss of youth that, while not on a par with Beckett's classic, is far more than a mere homage...What in lesser hands may have come across as yet another autobiographical, self-obsessed monologue - it's not for nothing that he looks up the word "solipsistic" at one point - Laurence makes it work...It's unfortunate that Laurence lacks Beckett's gift of simplicity: Even at 80 minutes, the piece feels too rambling and self-indulgent. But it's more than good enough to make one regret having to wait 30 years for the sequel.

The New York Times B+
(Anita Gates) “Krapp, 39” has a sort of intoxicating fatalism. A 39-year-old actor, inspired by Samuel Beckett’s play “Krapp’s Last Tape,” decides to follow in the title character’s footsteps by recording his thoughts on his own life so far, for a future (staged) reflection. The process does not cheer him up.

Nytheatre.com A+ 14; Variety A 13; New Yorker A 13; That Sounds Cool A 13; Gothamist A 13; Flavorwire A 13; TONY A 13; Theatermania B+ 11; New York Post B+ 11; The New York Times B+ 11; TOTAL: 125/10=12.5 (A/A-)
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Aristocrats

Grade: B


By Brian Friel; Directed by Charlotte Moore; Irish Repertory Theatre. (CLOSED)


Not to be confused with the infamous joke of the same name, this revival of Brian Friel's play (first seen on these shores in 1989) concerns a family gather that turns from the joy of an impending wedding to much darker business. Critics for the most part (with the glaring exception of TheaterMania's D+) are taken with Charlotte Moore's production, praising the show's Chekhovian dramaturgy and performance.



NYTimes A
(Wilborn Hampton) First rate... Charlotte Moore has directed a fine cast in a well-paced and low-key staging. John Keating is excellent as Casimir, wide-eyed and loquacious with a bark of a laugh, but unable to answer a direct question. Laura Odeh, Lynn Hawley and Orlagh Cassidy deliver solid performances as the three daughters, and Ciaran O’Reilly is especially good as Eamon, the local boy who loved one sister but married another. Sean Gormley adds a nice turn as Willie Diver.

NYTheatre.com A
(Mitchell Conway) In Irish Repertory Theatre's revival of Brian Friel's Aristocrats, a marvelously skilled cast of actors portray the life of an Irish Roman Catholic family reuniting at their home in Ballybeg Hall, in County Donegal, Ireland. This is a moving work, reminiscent of Chekhov's The Cherry Orchard in many ways, yet featuring its own gamut of complicated and distinctive characters... deftly directed by Charlotte Moore; intelligently peppering tragic moments with comedic sensibilities, and creating dynamic shifts of energy. There is a stunning set by James Morgan. Although the frame of the set is chopped-up sepia-toned pictures of the estate, there remains a gratifyingly naturalistic feel to the environment generally.

NY Daily News A-
(Joe Dziemianowicz) Director Charlotte Moore's top-flight ensemble makes this Irish Rep revival very satisfying,

Variety A-
(Marilyn Stasio) Brian Friel's achingly beautiful 1979 play about the disintegration of Ireland's gentry, "Aristocrats," is so Chekhovian, you keep expecting his distinguished family to put down the whiskey bottle and start swigging tea from a samovar. In the Irish Rep's meticulous revival, helmer (and company a.d.) Charlotte Moore assembles a dream cast to play the members of this diminished clan, gathered here at the bedside of their dying patriarch to wring their hands over their proud lost heritage and to illustrate Friel's belief in the healing power of storytelling to take a family, a village, a nation through troubled times.

The Observer B+
(John Helipern) [a] loving revival of Brian Friel’s 1979 Aristocrats at the invaluable Irish Repertory Theatre. The famously Chekhovian play about identity and loss is concerned with how we’re all the authors and actors of our own fictions: Telling stories helps us deal with the hurt that life brings us

CurtainUp B+
(Elyse Sommer) As staged by the Irish Rep's artistic director Charlotte Moore, Tom's visit with the O'Donnells is given exactly the exactly right intimacy it calls for. And, with Anton Chekhov's plays showing up on stages all over New York... it's easy to see why Aristocrats is known as Friel's most Chekhovian work.

NYPost B+
(Frank Scheck) Some patience is required to appreciate the low-key plotting and often rambling dialogue. But Friel's gift for language is obvious here, especially in the fanciful anecdotes about the family home once being visited by the likes of O'Casey and Yeats. Director Charlotte Moore makes good use of the Rep's limited playing area. She has also elicited fine work from the ensemble - particularly Keating, who lends a compelling air of eccentricity to the loquacious Casimir.

TalkinBroadway B+
(Matthew Murray) Charlotte Moore’s production of Friel’s play is a breezy and laid-back one, drawing few (if any) distinctions between the comedy and drama of these people’s lives. It also presents the very simple story as something of a corporeal ghost yarn, with actors materializing as if from the walls of James Morgan’s fading-oil-painting set, and their offstage voices or piano playing providing the crucial texture of a close-knit group of loving discontents. You get the sense that this family is just what it appears to be: dissolving, but trying to solidify itself with its last gasps.

The New Yorker B
Brian Friel’s play was more relevant forty years ago, when the walls were still coming down, but today this revival is a very well acted museum piece.

TimeOut New York B-
(Adam Feldman) The writing is wonderfully observant and sympathetic, but in Charlotte Moore’s workmanlike production, it comes across without great elegance or energy. If you can fortify yourself in advance, however—a stiff mug of Irish coffee might do the trick—there is much to admire in Friel’s account of the fall of a family’s fortune.

Backstage B-
(Andy Probst) Admirable if uneven... Aristocrats has the potential to inspire laughter and maybe even a tear, but in Moore's hurried staging only the former is consistently achieved. Although whenever Ciarán O'Reilly — who gives a standout performance as Alice's husband, Eamon, a man not to the manner (manor?) born — takes center stage, the emotional and intellectual appeal of Aristocrats is abundantly apparent.

Bloomberg C+
(John Simon) With its cramped, L-shaped auditorium, tiny stage lacking technical resources and modest finances, the Irish Repertory Theatre is in no position to do justice to Brian Friel’s Aristocrats...Two performances do stand out. John Keating turns the music- loving, magisterially lying Casimir into a mesmerizing figure of dilapidated grandeur, laughing as he stares down a hostile world. Equally fine is Lynn Hawley as the beleaguered but heroic Judith.

TheaterMania D+
(Patrick Lee) Due to its unimaginative direction and uneven performances, The Irish Repertory Theatre's revival of Brian Friel's rich, layered Chekhovian drama Aristocrats is rarely up to the task of the material.

NYT A 13; NYTH A 13; V A- 12; DN A- 12; TO B+ 11; NYP B+ 11; CU B+ 11; TB B+ 11; TNY B 10; BS B- 9 ; TONY B- 9; BB C+ 8; TM D+ 5; TOTAL = 135/13 = 10.38 = B
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Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Sixty Miles to Silver Lake

GRADE: B-

By Dan LeFranc. Directed by Anne Kauffman. SoHo Rep. (CLOSED)

There's hardly a consensus view of Dan LeFranc's two-hander about a father and son dealing with the aftermath of a nasty divorce on successive car trips. A few critics bought it hook, line, and sinker, from its naturalistic intimacy to its stylized language and time-spliced dramaturgy, and praised Anne Kauffman's direction as well as the performances of Dane DeHaan and Joseph Adams. But most critics had a quibble with one element or another, and a few found the whole thing a strained slog.


That Sounds Cool A
(Aaron Riccio) Dan LeFranc brilliantly captures the relationship between a father and son in a series of photo-realistic snapshots, develops them over several years, and then shuffles them together for maximum exposure...LeFranc's writing is outstanding. With Denny, he nails the run-on excitment and universal disdain of teenagers; with Ky, he's got his finger to the pulse of the awkwardly embarassing ways in which fathers try to stay hip and their attempts to stay in control...The show also benefits from top-notch directing and acting. Anne Kauffman, as usual, remains fixed on the human interactions: her deft ability to communicate a plausible weirdness saves the latter third of Silver Lake.

Variety A-
(Marilyn Stasio) Nothing--and everything--happens in the hourlong car ride on a California highway depicted by Dan LeFranc in "Sixty Miles to Silver Lake." Time marches onward (and jumps backward) in this painfully honest two-hander about the fragile relationship between a divorced dad and the son he picks up every Saturday after soccer practice...LeFranc has a golden ear for the inane conversations conducted by men in cars...Adams turns in such a dead-on perf that he doesn't neglect the little-boy side of Ky's essentially immature character...The onstage moves are actually too subtle to support LeFranc's dramatic ambitions...Technical flaws aside, both the play and its players make it clear enough that, behind the combative behavior of this alienated father and son, there's a terrible unanswered need for love on both sides.

Backstage B+
(Andy Propst) Dan LeFranc captures the conversational awkwardness, intimacy, and anger shared by a divorced man and his teenage son in Sixty Miles to Silver Lake, an often poetic play in which bends in the road are the rule...Under Anne Kauffman's direction, Adams and DeHaan turn in richly detailed performances. DeHaan in particular manages to subtly suggest the variations in Denny's age while also making the frequently sulky, passive-aggressive teen charming. Unfortunately, what's meant to be the climax of the play — a ride the two share just before Ky's split with his ex — confuses.

CurtainUp B+
(Jenny Sandman) Dan LeFranc has vaulted his way onto my Playwrights to Watch list...Dane DeHaan is heartbreaking (and accurate) as Denny, mortified by his father one moment and trying to impress him the next. Joseph Adams as Ky is as embarrassing as every dad is at that age...This nuanced look at a troubled relationship is written in an oddly poetic syntax that sounds natural to the ear. The direction (by Anne Kauffman, of God's Ear fame and others) isn't without its flaw...Nevertheless, it's a fine production of a new play by a hot playwright.

New York Times B
(Neil Geznlinger) Mr. LeFranc’s emotion-filled California car ride features a divorced father (Joseph Adams) and his teenage son (Dane DeHaan), who sit side by side for about 75 minutes but just seem to grow farther and farther apart. The car is presumably gas-powered, but it could easily be running on the fumes of anger and resentment emanating from these two...Eventually Mr. LeFranc expertly leads you to realize that, however many dimensions a normal car ride takes place in, this one has an extra. And the actors, directed by Anne Kauffman in this co-production by Page 73 and Soho Rep, string things out perfectly...It’s an intriguing miniclinic in expanding the playwriting box. There is, though, a bit of a letdown once it’s over because you begin to suspect that despite the growing ominousness of the tale, you’ve just seen a lot of technique but not much substance.

Just Shows To Go You B
(Patrick Lee) What emerges from the playwright’s structure is initially fascinating - the juxtapositions of the scenes struck me as a means to illustrate the cumulative damage caused by the careless things that parents say to children - but the ninety-minute one-act, despite Anne Kauffman’s fluid direction and fully convincing performances by Joseph Adams and Dane Dehaan, nonetheless runs out of gas around the hour mark...Despite that, this is a playwright well worth watching out for, and a play well worth seeing.

Theatermania B-
(Dan Balcazo) Anne Kauffman's staging of Dan LeFranc's Sixty Miles to Silver Lake, currently at Soho Rep in a co-production with Page 73, manages to be engaging, even if the play itself could use a bit of work...Kauffman's direction of her cast and attention to nuance prevents the play from seeming overly static...However, she and set designer Dane Laffrey don't seem to have trusted in this work enough, and have included some special effects which are frankly unnecessary. There are some affecting moments of familial bonding and dramatic tension embedded within the play...However, the non-traditional structure occasionally seems like just a trick to punch up an otherwise banal father-son story that doesn't have much new to say.

New Yorker B-
In scenes that jump back and forth through time, the two characters are revealed to be essentially static—Denny always wants a decent father, Ky remains oblivious. Though the two actors, well directed by Anne Kauffman, do a masterly job, LeFranc’s script is ultimately too one-sided to do his characters justice.

NY Post C+
(Frank Scheck) A flawed journey. It doesn't live up to its thematic aspirations, and it's obvious the playwright is relying too heavily on stylization to compensate for the banal nature of his material. While the staging includes imaginative visual flourishes - the car breaks into pieces, as if to accentuate the emotional gulf between the riders - the static proceedings, even at 75 minutes, prove monotonous. The characters do get under your skin, though, thanks to the superb performances.

Time Out NY C-
(David Cote) A wistful dissection of father-son dynamics that isn’t quite as meaningful or moving as it thinks it is—despite Anne Kauffman’s typically astute direction and two strong performances...There’s a twee aftertaste to this chamber exercise, made worse by the deliberately banal dialogue and stereotyped characters. Luckily, Kauffman and her actors nail small moments of honesty, keeping LeFranc’s formal pretensions from running off the road.

Village Voice D+
(James Hannahan) Like most scripts set in automobiles, Dan LeFranc's Sixty Miles to Silver Lake can hardly breathe—and doesn't feel much like a play...LeFranc's canny ear for L.A.-speak makes these characters convincingly shallow and grating...The play, directed by Anne Kauffman, cries out for insight or perspective—could this be an allegory for the Bush years? Will they crash and learn to appreciate life? But LeFranc shuns profundity. In lieu of a revelation, three-quarters of the way through the piece simply loses its mind, exploding into an absurd mishmash of tics and taglines from the previous dialogue and closing with an image out of Shepard or Rapp.

Nytheatre.com D
(Allison Taylor) This kind of material is usually markedly autobiographical—and yet, what makes Sixty Miles to Silver Lake such a difficult and dissatisfying play is its reluctance to be personal...Anne Kauffman has seemingly directed them to emphasize the characters' brutality and to hide any trace of their vulnerability...Despite all the pair's sound and fury, the play does not come close to tapping into visceral pain...As a replacement for that kind of visceral pain, LeFranc and Kauffman devise forced tonal shifts...The car ride turns out to be a long, slow, unchanging blur.

Gothamist D
(John Del Signore) Sixty Miles—and let's just get this bit of bitchiness out of the way; it feels like one hundred and sixty miles—skips around through time to examine one fractured family's ongoing acrimony, but for a play that spans eight years, it's remarkable how little changes...Maybe that's LeFranc's point; that a relationship between father and son can become tragically frozen at a certain stage of development, no matter how many miles they put behind them. But that doesn't make for compelling theater in this case...The only surprising moment in LeFranc's tedious trip comes at the end, when father and son finally step out of the car to kick a soccer ball around, and not a single note from "Cats in the Cradle" is heard.

That Sounds Cool A 13; Variety A- 12; Backstage B+ 11; CurtainUp B+ 11; NY Times B 10; Just Shows to Go You B 10; Theatermania B- 9; New Yorker B- 9; NY Post C+ 8; Time Out NY C- 6; Village Voice D+ 5; Nytheatre.com D 4; Gothamist D 4; TOTAL: 112/13=8.61 (B-)
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Keeping Up to "Speed"


In case you've been living under a rock for the past month or so: Jeremy Piven bowed out of the acclaimed Broadway production of Speed-the-Plow rather suddenly just before Christmas, citing sushi-induced mercury poisoning (and inciting a war of words with the show's producers). Jumping into the breach were Norbert Leo Butz, for roughly a month, and now William H. Macy, taking over the role of producer Bobby Gould.

A number of daily critics have duly returned to the show and filed new reviews. Only the Times' Brantley bothered to check out Butz's Gould, but he and all the rest uniformly praise Macy's take, while most also note considerable growth in the performance of Elisabeth Moss and Raul Esparza. (How rare it is that a critic gets a chance to see, and note in print, how much a show can deepen over a long run. Wouldn't it be great if this happened more often, even without recasting?)

So whatever do we do about our grade? It doesn't make sense to change the grade from our initial culling, particularly because the individual review grades here have not really changed enough to affect the average grade. But we feel we ought to reckon with the new reviews--i.e., provide links and summaries. After the jump...


New York Times
(Ben Brantley) Now that I have seen two of Mr. Piven’s replacements in the central role of Bobby Gould, a film producer who catches a slight case of existential crisis, I am newly respectful of both Mr. Mamet’s accomplishment here and of the artistry of first-rate actors...Mr. Butz, an actor of infectious buoyancy (blissfully in evidence on Broadway in “Dirty Rotten Scoundrels” and “Is He Dead?”), was warmer, less jaded and more boyish...Mr. Macy uses flat tones — which by degrees shade into fierce irritability and all-out anger — and his lean, weathered face to suggest the weariness of a man who has paid his dues, knows the score and is starting to think that he may have underestimated the price.

Variety
(David Rooney) Macy's long experience as a David Mamet collaborator shows in his mastery of the playwright's ricochet dialogue. Equally significant is the actor's screen persona -- shaped by a string of humiliated losers in films like "Fargo," "Magnolia" and "The Cooler" -- which adds poignant ripples of fear and desperation to his easily manipulated character...He's less shticky and fun than Piven was in the role but he has bone-deep vulnerability, which makes Bobby's momentary slip more plausible.

Theatermania
(Brian Scott Lipton) If one needs any further convincing that one actor's presence can change the dynamic--and even meaning--of a play one already knows, look no further than William H. Macy's performance as Bobby Gould...Macy's world-weary gravitas adds an entirely new and welcome dimension to Mamet's amorality tale of wheeling-and-dealing in Hollywood--and the result is now somewhat less funny but ultimately more truthful than any production of the work I've seen before.

Talkin' Broadway
(Matthew Murray) By virtue of his natural business-schlub-next-door charm and his lickety-split spitting of Mamet’s decadently staccato dialogue (something Piven did not quite possess), Macy has transformed a character completely unlike his familiar screen personae into one exactly like them - while losing nothing along the way.

Hollywood Reporter
(Frank Scheck) Macy...well understands the rhythms of Mamet's musically profane dialogue...The actor delivers a performance that expertly combines macho swagger with vulnerability. In the latter element he's more effective than Piven, who failed to make the character's conversion convincing. This is partly a result of the writing, which doesn't really work in the crucial second act when Karen arrives late at night at Gould's home to deliver her "report." But unlike Piven, who effortlessly conveyed the sort of arrogant bluster that also marks his award-winning turn in "Entourage," Macy has a wounded, world-weary demeanor that here makes Gould's sudden attack of artistic conscience much more credible.

AM New York
(Matt Windman) Compared with Piven, Macy delivers a performance that is far more sincere, hesitant and subtle. Unfortunately, Macy’s line readings are much slower, turning what was a marathon of rapid-fire, overlapping dialogue into a tranquil walk in the park. The ensemble chemistry has changed significantly because Macy is much older than Piven, as well as the rest of the cast. It is no longer believable that Bobby Gould and Charlie Fox, played by Raul Esparza, are buddies who survived the mailroom together. However, the age difference between Gould and his temp secretary Karen, played by Elisabeth Moss, makes him more vulnerable to her sexy looks...In any event, Neil Pepe’s sharp production still provides smart entertainment that will rock you, shock you and leave you in hysterics.

American Theatre Web
(Andy Propst) With the addition of Macy to the ensemble that also includes Raul Esparza and Elisabeth Moss, director Neil Pepe's staging of the play seems to be newly minted, and for anyone who saw the show when it opened last October, a return visit seems almost required. For theatergoers who have not taken the show about a pair of viperous film executives and the young woman who finds herself embroiled in their lives, it's probably never been a better time to catch the show.

Daily News
(Joe Dziemianowicz) Piven gave a solid performance. But Mamet's comedy of movieland wheeler-dealers and the tug of war between art and commerce is zestier and zippier now. The play remains a bantamweight affair (a swift 85 minutes), but Macy deepens the dynamics all around.

Associated Press
(Michael Kuchwara) Well, there's an upside to Jeremy Piven's highly publicized departure last month from the Broadway revival of "Speed-the-Plow." David Mamet's scabrous comedy of Hollywood high jinks has gotten even better...Macy's expertise with Mamet's quicksilver repartee shows. He's confident with the language, batting it back and forth with the skill of a tennis ace. The actor plays Bobby Gould, a movie studio executive who is being dangled a hot property, a surefire prison buddy picture...Brashness is tempered by experience, although Bobby still can go for the jugular when the need arises. Only he does it with more quiet authority.

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Monday, January 26, 2009

Freshwater

GRADE: B-


By Virginia Woolf. Directed by Anne Bogart. A Women's Project and SITI Company production at the Julia Miles Theatre. Through Feb. 15.

Critics seemed surprised, more or less pleasantly, to find that Virginia Woolf's only play, conceived as a sort of inside joke, is a light, absurd-ish lark. They were less certain what to make of SITI Company's all-stops-out production, with some finding it overcooked and others appreciating its tireless zaniness. James Schuette's sets and costumes receive nearly universal praise. A note for Variety's Marilyn Stasio: The "tall, lanky" man playing the "regina ex machina" Queen Victoria is quite obviously Tom Nelis, doing his best Terry Jones voice. And to Backstage's Adam Perlman: Nice use of the director's name as a verb.


Backstage A-
(Adam R. Perlman) Departing from the existential experimental lyricism that marked her prose, Woolf composed a drawing-room trifle smacking with the wit of a smarty-pants schoolchild...The gleam of an inside joke makes the material more than a bit trying. That Freshwater lives up to its name, then, largely owes to the ideal interpretation of director Anne Bogart and her ever-versatile SITI Company...What's most impressive about the evening--as with the best of SITI's work--is the way the company functions in sync, not in synchronicity, with members reacting to one another and their environment.

NY Daily News B+
(Joe Dziemianowicz) "Freshwater" isn't deep. It's 75 minutes of plotless antics set at the sunny home of 19th-century photographer Julia Margaret Cameron (Ellen Lauren) and her legal-eagle husband, Charles (Tom Nelis, who double-duties as Queen Victoria). Things are most fun when English actress Ellen Terry (Kelly Maurer) banishes the boredom of posing for painter-husband George Frederick Watts by dreaming up a hunky Lt. John Craig (Gian Murray Gianino). Anne Bogart's staging is colorful, the cast is game, and though it's far from a laugh-out-loud frolic, Woolf-hounds are bound to be tickled.

New Yorker B+
The folderol, a kind of family knees-up, makes fun of artistic ambition and Bloomsbury snobbism, and has never been produced before. The director, Anne Bogart, gives this hokum as rollicking and handsome a production as it is ever likely to get. Be prepared to get up and sing “God Save the Queen,” which is the only ceremony Woolf stands on.

American Theatre Web B+
(Andy Propst) A raucous, absurd dash through the world of some Victorian literary and artistic giants...If one thinks about the sort of familial chaos that runs through Kaufman and Hart's You Can't Take It With You, and then imagines that play being written by French absurdist Eugene Ionesco, the sense and feel of Freshwater can almost be realized...Bogart and her fine company have enjoyed layering their own playfulness onto Woolf's and nothing here should be taken that seriously, simply enjoyed.

Variety B
(Marilyn Stasio) Delivered in the broad style of an English music-hall entertainment, this comic spoof sends up an earlier clique of literary swells, the cool late-Victorian crowd who hung out at photographer Julia Margaret Cameron's house on the Isle of Wight. While helmer Anne Bogart deftly conveys the sophomoric glee behind the original giddy enterprise, the over-bright and over-brash production puts a certain Yankee spin on the Brits' intellectual antics...Because the piece was written for private consumption, it wasn't Woolf's job to make its topical references relevant to a modern aud. Unfortunately, neither Bogart nor dramaturg Megan E. Carter has done much in that department, either. What the helmer has done, though, is direct our focus to Terry, whose intelligence and impatience come through nicely in Kelly Maurer's clean, unaffected perf.

That Sounds Cool B-
(Aaron Riccio) The play has enough doors opening and closing to be a farce, save that for all the entrances and exits, nobody ever really goes anywhere or does anything. So far as ham goes, Bogart's seasoned Woolf's recipe as well as she can and it does stand at a lean 70 minutes, but you'd better not come hungry for much more because--true to today's starving artists--the table is pretty threadbare.

The New York Times C+
(Charles Isherwood) Anne Bogart, the experimental director who leads the SITI Company, might seem an apt choice for this exuberantly nonlinear play...But for all its silly imagery—special guest porpoise included—“Freshwater” on the page delights primarily with its mad, lyric language...Ms. Bogart either does not appreciate the play’s gossamer charm or does not expect the audience to absorb it naturally. She does not have a delicate ear for text, to put it mildly, and the house acting style of the SITI Company favors movement over literate interpretation. The unfortunate result is a light comic lark played as if it were a laugh riot...It’s all a great shame, particularly because the physical production is lovely and appropriate.

Time Out NY C+
(Rob Weinert-Kendt) The theatrical equivalent of cotton candy: all spun-sugar brightness wrapped around thin air. It’s roughly as nourishing, and as headache-inducing...On the page, the satire is brittle and gossamer-slight, if inarguably fascinating as a glimpse of the novelist’s lighter side; onstage, in its U.S. premiere, director Anne Bogart and her tireless, tight-knit ensemble have turned it into an effortful, galumphing goof...While there is no small degree of joy in witnessing this crack ensemble cut loose...the insistently farcical tone, imposed on a text with so few actual jokes, soon becomes assaultive.

Offoffonline C
(Valerie Work) While Freshwater is undeniably both less developed and lighter in tone than many of Woolf’s other works, this interpretation is overly simplified, and the production is the weaker for it...The energy of Freshwater lies primarily in its language, which is lush with imagery and wordplay that are consistently underexplored. If Bogart and her cast had paid as much attention to developing the spoken text as they did to the developing the piece’s physical vocabulary, it would be a much stronger production. As it is, the actors are absorbed in their mission of presenting the play as if it is the lightest of all possible fictions. Frequently, their efforts are irritating.

Theatermania C-
(Sandy MacDonald) Director Anne Bogart and her SITI Company have pushed the puerility up several notches, achieving a Three Stooges-level of crude inanity, rather than trusting the text to yield sufficient humor. Moreover, what was obviously just a playlet has been padded with all sorts of extraneous unfunny business in order to stretch out the evening's "entertainment" to an hour...In the end, a production that honored Woolf's actual comedic accomplishment without burying it in over-the-top clowning would make for a more appropriate--not to mention more enjoyable--homage than this one.

Village Voice C-
(Michael Feingold) Anne Bogart's determinedly self-conscious production stomps on both truth and fun, equating heavy overdoing with humor and shouting with Victorian solemnity. Ellen Lauren and Tom Nelis, as Mrs. Cameron and her spouse, each snatch a few moments of reality in the general din, but it's puzzling that Bogart, with her scrupulous intelligence, should care so little about the reality behind Woolf's jape, the ideas embedded in it, or the skills needed to execute it convincingly onstage. Even at their most mawkish, the artists Woolf pokes fun at here had a sharper sense of Beauty than that.

Backstage A- 12; American Theatre Web B+ 11; NY Daily News B+ 11; New Yorker B+ 11; Variety B 10; That Sounds Cool B- 9; The New York Times C+ 8; TONY C+ 8; Offoffonline C 7; Theatermania C- 6; Village Voice C- 6; TOTAL: 99/11=9 (B-)
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Hedda Gabler

Grade: D+



By Henrik Ibsen, Adapted by Christopher Shinn, Directed by Ian Rickson. At the American Airlines Theater through March 29th.

With the exception of CurtainUp and Total Theatre, the highest grade this show received was one B- from TheaterMania. The major subject up for debate amongst the critics is what is to blame for the misfiring of such a gathering of talent (including Pulitzer finalist Chris Shinn, stage megastar Michael Cerveris and Mary Louise Parker) with most reviewers blaming director Ian Rickson. Some do not care for Shinn's adaptation, while others really like it, some hate Mary Louise Parker's performance while others think it's the only reason to see the show etc.



Total Theater A-
(David Lefkowitz) Mary Louise Parker makes Christopher Shinn’s new adaptation of Henrik Ibsen’s Hedda Gabler the best, most exciting version of the show I have ever seen. Her every word, every gesture is fascinating, magnetic. Her essence is sensual, her beauty radiates, especially as gowned by designer Ann Roth. It’s a brilliant, many-layered performance as she restlessly prowls the stage like a feral tiger imprisoned in a small cage.

CurtainUp A-
(Simon Saltzman) Yes, there are many ways to interpret the role. But to Parker's credit, we judge Hedda not as evil or deranged but as a bored, aristocratic woman with a ferocious need to test and challenge the suffocating Victorian society in which she lives. Energized and revitalized by Shinn's adaptation (from a literal translation by Anne-Charlotte Harvey) our ears are immediately set at ease with the commendably clear and unfussy syntax. I do not have the new text, but based on the older version I do have, I can say that Ibsen's ironies and subtleties have not been diminished or lost. Hedda Gabler also benefits from Ian Rickson's staging, conspicuous for his adoration and consideration of the play's centerpiece. Our very first image of Hedda awakening sensually on a sofa in the ante-room and stretching her limbs beneath a large clouded mirror is a stunner, but only the first of a series of postures and attitudes that will define perhaps the most willful Hedda of them all.

TheaterMania B-
(Brian Scott Lipton) While many theatergoers (and critics) were enraptured by Rickson's recent production of The Seagull, some of the director's shortcomings are as noticeably on view here as they were there. ...Luckily, Parker's leading men are on the same proverbial page with her. Cerveris, while perhaps a slightly more virile looking Tesman than might be expected, perfectly captures the character's obliviousness to both the outside world and his wife's true needs. And in his two scenes, Sparks expertly balances Lovborg's loucheness and goodness, and his chemistry with Parker is undeniably explosive. Even though most theatergoers know Hedda's fate, if one chooses to see the play agaain, it is in part to try to figure her out on one's own, But mostly, it's an opportunity to watch a committed actress wrestle with the character's demons, which Parker does unflinchingly.

American Theatre Web C-
(Andy Propst) For this new Broadway outing, which uses a new, colloquial adaptation by Christopher Shinn, Parker delivers a Hedda which often fascinates, but unfortunately, neither it, nor director Ian Rickson's production ever truly satisfies.

New York Magazine C-
(Stephanie Zacharek)
Parker’s Hedda inspires neither sympathy nor revulsion, even though, ideally, the character should invoke every feeling in between. Rickson has shaped the material so that the hapless humans who so annoy Hedda aren’t just average, dull, well-meaning people but hopeless drips, the sort of mouth-breathers everyone wants to avoid on the playground of life. When they say something stupid, as they invariably do, Parker’s Hedda responds either with an impatient eye roll or an attempt at a Jack Benny–style deadpan stare before lashing out with a trademark cutting remark.

TalkinBroadway C-
(Matthew Murray) Despite providing sound entertainment and intermittent flashes of intelligence, Roundabout’s new production of Hedda Gabler at the American Airlines is missing almost all the air that typically makes Henrik Ibsen’s 119-year-old dissection of disaffection so breathtaking. As newly adapted by Christopher Shinn (from Anne-Charlotte Harvey’s literal translation), directed by Ian Rickson, and acted by a cast of unquestionable stature but uneven style that includes Mary-Louise Parker, Michael Cerveris, Paul Sparks, and Peter Stormare, this serious-minded classic has never seemed more immature.

Theater News Online C-
This Hedda Gabler that Mr Rickman [note from Isaac: it's Ian Rickson, not Rickman]delivers is never persuasive and never reaches its potential. It is as sadly stillborn as its doomed heroine's marriage.

Time Out NY C-
(David Cote) Ian Rickson recently staged a fine Seagull on Broadway, but this production seems weirdly stilted and slack at the joints. Christopher Shinn’s adaptation pares away verbiage in favor of keener subtext, leading to arrhythmic dialogue and slack pacing. Sparks offers respite with fire and intensity, but Parker’s somnambulant Hedda seems like a weak idea given free rein. If the drama itself is actually Hedda’s nightmare, we’re having it too.

The New Yorker C-
(John Lahr) Here, instead of light, there is dark; instead of order, there is clutter; instead of Hedda’s father’s portrait, there is a glazed mirror, which reflects only Hedda’s alienated self; instead of the external space, Rickson shows us her internal one. The choice, it seems to me, is bold but wrong. It tilts the stakes from psychological perplexity to didactic melodrama.

Associated Press C-
(Michael Kuchwara) If the production and performances are jagged, playwright Christopher Shinn's clear-headed, economical and modern-sounding adaptation is not. It moves with surprisingly swiftness across Hildegard Bechtler's odd, almost spare setting of the Tesman living room, which is as off-kilter as the people who occupy it.

Backstage D+
(David Sheward) As he did with his recent production of The Seagull, a hit in London and New York, Rickson has dusted off a familiar classic, sexed it up, and given his leading lady the opportunity to grab the spotlight with a flashy performance. Though Kristin Scott Thomas in The Seagull added humor, joy, childishness, charm, and narcissism to Arkadina, Parker's Hedda is like Sunset Boulevard's Norma Desmond plopped down in 19th-century Norway. Don't get me wrong: Parker is one of our finest actors, and there are moments of passionate fire in her portrayal. But she is altogether too contemporary for this role, and she's been directed to pitch herself to the edge of high camp.

The Financial Times D+
(Brendan Lemon) The theoretically smart Hedda, based on Christopher Shinn’s new adaptation, proves a disappointment. Curiously uninvolving, this Roundabout Theatre production presents a host of artistic talents spinning off from one another as if in separate solar systems.

USAToday D+
One would assume that, given her paralyzing fear of scandal, the last thing Henrik Ibsen's tortured 19th-century housewife would want is to make a spectacle of herself. But in the Roundabout Theatre Company's new production of Hedda Gabler (** out of four), which opened Sunday at the American Airlines Theatre, that's precisely what she does.

NYPost D+
(Barabara Hoffman) Certainly, there are moments: the moody arpeggios Hedda plays on the piano; the electric kiss she gives Ejlert when she grabs his hand and thrusts it under her skirt before pushing him away. But overall, Ibsen deserves better. So do we.

Gay City News D+
(David Kennerly) Make no mistake - as Hedda, Mary Louise Parker gives a mesmerizing performance, carrying on like a petulant child in need of a good nap. But it's as if Rickson told her to imagine she were taping an episode of "Weeds," her contemporary television comedy-drama, instead of a period piece. What's more, she's so despicable she has no redeeming qualities - even the meanest, wildest of Heddas elicited some measure of sympathy, but not this one. At the tragic end of the play, what should have been a bang registers as barely a whimper.


Bloomberg D
(John Simon) According to Rickson, Ibsen’s characters shove and wrestle one another, bully and yell, stick their faces crassly into those of others and altogether show scant civility. Why then would Hedda be stifling in punctilio? Are boxers bored in the ring, clowns suffocating in the circus? There are moments when Parker’s charm and talent keep Hedda afloat, but all too often she drowns in misdirection. Already at curtain rise, she wakes up in a skimpy nightgown on a bed under an inclining mirror, as if she were Miss January after a night of revelry at the Playboy mansion. The good Michael Cerveris as well is fitfully persuasive as her husband, but would Ibsen’s handsome but stodgy blond be a fidgety nervous Nellie, bald as an egg and running around barefoot when his proper aunt is visiting?

NY Daily News D
(Joe Dziemianowicz) The adaptation by playwright Christopher Shinn... is too contemporary by half. It seems less concerned with illuminating Hedda as it is in putting lines in her mouth that get a rise out of the audience. Ian Rickson's staging follows suit. Even a surprisingly erotic clinch between Hedda and her ex-lover, Ejlert (Paul Sparks), is defused when it's played for an awkward laugh. Earlier this season, this British director found airy lyricism in Chekhov's The Seagull. Nuance seems to have flown the coop.

NY1 D
(Roma Torre) Hedda, if done correctly, reminds us how impossible it was for intelligent women to thrive in a world dominated by the smoky confines of patriarchal society. Ibsen's great pre-feminist work is sadly reduced to a soap opera here. Hedda may know how to handle pistols, but this production is a misfire.

Entertainment Weekly D
(Melissa Rose Bernardo) Rickson — who staged such a sublime Seagull with Kristin Scott Thomas and Sundance darling Carey Mulligan last fall — has assembled a cast that's mismatched at best, misguided at worst. As Hedda's well-intentioned but whipped writer husband, the always reliable Michael Cerveris turns in a very classical Tesman...which is completely at odds with Parker's more contemporary approach to the material. Paul Sparks adopts a mysterious Norwegian (or is it Southern?) accent as bad-boy author Ejlert Lovborg. And why are they all constantly moving around the furniture? Isn't that what maids are for? Or stagehands?

Village Voice D
(Michael Feingold)
Despite its violence, Hedda is more dark comedy than stark tragedy. Full of undercurrents and nuances, it's easy to grasp but extremely hard to realize. Ian Rickson's new Roundabout production, though livelier in patches than his somnolent dead-zone Seagull last fall, is a baffling patchwork that quickly falls apart at the seams... Mary-Louise Parker, who ought to be a great Hedda, and probably could be, in a different production. Here, she seems displaced, cut off from Hedda's feelings except when asked to display them with the weird triple underlining that Rickson apparently considers the best way to convey sexual subtext. She may be trying to animate her unsupportive supporting players: Paul Sparks, excellent in other roles, makes a distressingly wooden Lovborg; Peter Stormare, once Bergman's fire-breathing Hamlet, supplies a grumpy, de-energized Brack; Ana Reeder renders Thea as a frumpy barfly out of film noir. Don't blame the actors: Rickson's Seagull reduced similarly interesting performers to an equivalent drabness. You wonder if he would even know what Hedda means when she tells Lovborg, in other English versions, to "do it beautifully." Without a sense of beauty, you can't make sense of Ibsen.

NYPress D
(Leonard Jacobs) Parker’s conceit is to make Hedda an overripe nubile from Beverly Hills 90210: overindulged, sophomoric and soporific. It’s an error to play her without connecting Ibsen’s pre-feminist dots; to roll her eyes to indicate disgust in lieu of unearthing what makes a well-to-do lady lope like a loon. Hedda may hate the world, but Parker’s bag of tics is anachronistic, with double takes worthy of a Mike Nichols comedy and more mugging than a night in South Central Los Angeles.

Variety D
(David Rooney) Mary-Louise Parker's interpretation of Hedda Gabler was probably always going to be a little wacky, but in the Roundabout revival she's the loopiest of a fairly off-kilter bunch. Using a disappointingly blunt new adaptation by Christopher Shinn, this is a production so doused in glum eccentricities that Ibsen's terminally bored neurotic has already reached the apex of her caged desperation before a line of dialogue has even been spoken. And while there's entertainment to be had from Parker's curt sarcasm and nutty double-takes, too many perplexing choices make the great play unaffecting and the irrational actions of its self-destructive antiheroine unsurprising.

Newsday D-
(Linda Winer) Parker's contemporary attitude comes through more as bratty petulance than profound psychological upheaval and despair at the boundaries of late 19th century Norwegian womanhood. When the truth about her ex-lover is revealed, Parker's freaky hiss suggests instead that water has been dumped on the Wicked Witch of the West. Otherwise, the production has a variety of quirky acting tics, but little unifying style.

Lighting and Sound America D-
(David Barbour) You can't accuse the actors of lacking a sense of period style, because nobody seems to have even tried for any. This is especially true of Paul Sparks' Lovborg, but he, at least, achieves a few moments of intensity. Much harder to take is Peter Stormare's Judge Brack: English is not the actor's first language, and he stresses the wrong words in each sentence, making him hellishly difficult to understand. Michael Cerveris' Tesman is even more thickheaded than usual, although he is touching in one or two places. Mary-Louise Parker's Hedda seems more geared for laughs than anything else, relying as it does on her trademark deadpan sarcasm.

NorthJersey.com F
(Robert Feldberg) By the time Hedda, feeling trapped with no way out – and that isn't convincing, either — finally closes the doors to her bedroom, we anticipate the famous gunshot not with trepidation or sadness, but with the comforting knowledge that it'll mean we can go home.

AMNY F
(Matt Windman) Ian Rickson’s production is a disjointed, disappointing mess marked by uneven performances and bewildering choices that contradict the original text. For instance, though it is still set in 19th century Europe, Christopher Shinn’s adaptation is extremely colloquial and contemporary in its language....See it at your own risk!

The Observer F
(John Helipern) What on earth were they thinking?

NYTheatre F
(Stan Richardson) I really love this play and I wish I were inspired to write more, but the production currently on offer engenders this reviewer with not a single insight (fresh or stale). This Hedda Gabler is not the fascinating and tragic tale of an ambitious woman trapped in a man's world; it is one of the greatest characters in all of dramatic literature trapped in an aggressively irrelevant production by a nonprofit that appears to have no vision beyond the starry names they strive to include in their subscriber brochures. What a major embarrassment for the Roundabout Theatre Company. Somebody on the staff really should have read the adaptation or sat in on a rehearsal. Shame on them.

NYTimes F-
(Ben Brantley) Ms. Parker (currently of the television series “Weeds”) has provided some of my most pleasurable theatergoing moments, in plays by Craig Lucas (Prelude to a Kiss, Reckless) and Paula Vogel (How I Learned to Drive). Mr. Shinn (Dying City) is one of the absolute best of a new generation of American playwrights. Michael Cerveris, who plays Hedda’s husband, is an actor who up to now I thought could do absolutely anything. And — oh, break, break my heart — the director of this “Hedda” is Ian Rickson, who this season delivered a nigh-perfect Seagull on Broadway, one of the best revivals I have ever, ever seen That he is now responsible for one of the worst revivals I have ever, ever seen has me flummoxed. Mr. Rickson’s “Seagull” was a fluidly integrated production in which everyone seemed to exist in the same moment and in the same universe. With this “Hedda” it’s not just that everyone is bad. It’s that they’re all bad in their own, different ways. At times you feel that because of some confusing detours in the back alleys of Broadway, actors who were meant to be in — I dunno, anything from “Grease” to “Equus” — showed up at the wrong place.


CU A- 12; TT A- 12; TM B- 9; ATW C- 6; TB C- 6; TONY C- 6; TNY C- 6; NYMAG C- 6; AP C- 6; TNO C- 6; FT D+ 5 BS D+ 5; NYPost D+ 5; USA D+ 5; GCN D+ 5; BB D 4; NYDN D 4; NY1 D 4; NYPR D 4; Variety D 4; EW D 4; VV D 4; ND D- 3; LSA D- 3; AMNY F 1; NJ F 1; NYTR F 1; NYO F 1; NYT F- 0;; TOTAL = 138/29 = 4.75 D+
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Ten Blocks on the Camino Real

GRADE: B-

By Tennessee Williams. Directed by David Herskovitz. Target Margin at the Ohio Theatre. CLOSED.

Target Margin's revival of the one-act warmup for Williams' much-unloved 1953 phantasmagoria Camino Real is embraced by some critics as an interesting experimental effort, artfully staged, although a louder chorus of detractors range from politely puzzled to downright dimissive. Among the latter is Variety's Marilyn Stasio, whose assertion that Camino Real represents Williams' "single bold attempt to expand his style and vision" seems pretty cruelly dismissive of the writer's post-1963 output.


Village Voice A-
(Alexis Soloski) This series of 10 surrealistic scenes originally received a workshop from Elia Kazan in 1948 and informed Williams's 1953 Broadway flop, Camino Real (also directed by Kazan)...In some dastardly tropical clime, an American boxer named Kilroy (Satya Bhabha)...flaunts bravado, a pair of golden gloves, and a terminal cardiac condition. "I got a heart in my chest as big as the head of a baby," he announces to all...Target Margin has a big heart as well, approaching the middling dialogue with its usual mix of smarts, brio, and very silly sound cues. Director Herskovits doesn't trouble to make sense of the script, taking a cheerful attitude toward its poetic excesses. That's likely for the best.

New York Times B+
(Wilborn Hampton) “Ten Blocks on the Camino Real” is more a collection of notes for a play than a play itself, a pastiche of scenes (what Williams called blocks) that the playwright expanded and increased to 16 for the final version. The director David Herskovits has mounted a lively and energetic staging at the Ohio Theater in SoHo, but most of the brief vignettes are so slight it is difficult to find a coherent thread tying them together. While enigmatic, the full-length play contains some of Williams’s most poetic imagery, and a sampling of it can be found in “Ten Blocks"...Satya Bhabha gives a fine performance as Kilroy, by turns angry and frightened.

CurtainUp B+
(Les Gutman) While the play's surrealism might have been off-putting to Broadway audiences, there's a sensibility here that's very familiar to those who know and appreciate what Target Margin does...David Herskovits has assembled an able group, headed by the engaging Satya Bhabha...What's even more interesting is that, even at its roughest, the lyricism and symbolism with which Williams saturates all of his plays are very much in evidence, even though without much connective tissue in the form of plot or character development. Is this, as Kazan suggested, one of Williams's best? Probably not. Yet I was pleased to see this spirited production in this compressed form.

Backstage B+
(David Sheward) David Herskovits, the company's artistic director, accentuates the bizarre aspects of the script by using exaggerated sounds and employing a cast of six to play all the roles, sometimes even sharing them — the gypsy is played by a male and a female actor. The gimmicks, unfortunately, sometimes overshadow Williams' lyrical poetry...On the plus side, Herskovits has for the most part directed his actors to play their roles without heightening the symbolism...Satya Bhabha endows Kilroy with a boyish charm as he fights against the forces of darkness and greed.

Theatermania B
(Andy Propst) An existential fantasia that reads and plays like an episode of The Twilight Zone written by Salvador Dali. But while artistic director David Herskovits has given the long-neglected work a respectable staging, he hasn't come up with a fully satisfying one...Surprisingly some of Herskovits' adventurousness seems to have been diluted here. Indeed, as the play unfolds, Herskovits and company serve up Williams' fantastical tale in an almost surprisingly straightforward manner...Not surprisingly, Williams' work pulsates with lyricism, and there are times when the poetry is delivered with haunting crispness.

Nytheatre.com C+
(Kelly Aliano) The play operates as a surrealistic dream—or nightmare—seemingly manifested by (or for) Kilroy, an American former prizefighter, forced to quit boxing because of heart trouble. His heart, he claims, "is as big as the head of a baby" and cannot withstand any stress of any kind...The entirety of the space is used in clever and unique ways. Williams's writing is beautiful but there does not seem to be any overarching throughline to tie the poetic riffs together tightly enough to constitute a dramatic plot.

Variety C
(Marilyn Stasio) While Target Margin does an amusing job of visualizing "Ten Blocks on the Camino Real"...the company doesn't show much interest in--or aptitude for--exploring what lies beneath its surreal exterior. And let's not even talk about the lack of acting chops...The cellar of the Ohio Theater in Soho is a great place to put on Williams' early attempt to write an experimental play. Under the guiding hand of helmer (and company a.d.) David Herskovits, Target Margin's design staff has transformed the space into a festive setting for a Mexican-flavored nightmare.

AM New York C
(Matt Windman) David Herskovits’ low-budget staging, which tries to instill a carnival atmosphere into the cavernous SoHo Theater, is lively and well meant but not very satisfying. His six-person cast is forced to play multiple roles, move slowly and indulge in big and broad gesturing, making a difficult play even more confusing. Only Satya Bhabha, who plays the young American boxer Kilroy, gains the audience’s interest. What’s most unclear of all is why Target Margin bothered to use this early draft of the play instead of the more fully realized and finished “Camino Real.” Was it totally for the sake of novelty? In any case, this production fails to make a compelling case for bringing it back from the dead.

Time Out NY D+
(Pamela Newton) More disjointed than the final version, this short play lacks the dramatic tension and rich characters that usually make Williams’s work so absorbing. Its shortcomings are only emphasized by David Herskovits’s direction, which moves at a lagging pace and exaggerates the weirdness of the piece...One genuine delight is Jim Breitmeier’s perky sound design, its cinematic effects injecting much-needed shots of energy. But even if the rest of the production were as lively, Ten Blocks would still serve as a warning: Discarded works of great masters are sometimes best left on the cutting-room floor.

Theatre News Online D+
(Sandy MacDonald) Some prototypes are best left to the archives. Judging from Target Margin Theater's amateurish, over-literal mounting, Ten Blocks on the Camino Real--the 1946 precursor of 1953's grandly surrealist Camino Real--is one such work. The company, directed by David Herskovitz, pounces on the meager portentous script like dogs on a bone--or, to use a more Williamsian simile, scavengers on a dung heap...As the temptress Esmeralda, Purva Bedi contributes a lithe body and refreshing directness--she alone among the cast doesn't seem intent on packing Cosmic Import into her lines...Otherwise, between the actors' posing and beseeching, and a sadistically amped sound track, it's not an enjoyable or especially enlightening experience.

Village Voice A- 12; New York Times B+ 11; CurtainUp B+ 11; Backstage B+ 11; Theatermania B 10; Nytheatre.com C+ 8; Variety C 7; AM New York C 7; TONY D+ 5; Theatre News Online D+ 5; TOTAL: 87/10=8.7 (B-)
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