Wednesday, September 30, 2009

A Steady Rain

GRADE: B-

By Keith Huff. Directed by John Crowley. The Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre. (CLOSED)

If ever there was a case for stunt casting, A Steady Rain is it. The reviews are mostly positive and the show, about two Chicago cops who have been passed over for detective, is a box office success. Critics find that Daniel Craig and Hugh Jackman elevate the material of this all-talk cop drama. Craig receives better notices than Jackman, who many find miscast, though still a pleasure to watch. Director John Crowley and set designer Scott Pask are also singled out in the reviews for making a mediocre play seem good, but most of the space is dedicated to Craig and Jackman, since according to the critics, that's the only reason the play made it to Broadway. A film version is in the works and many critics say it is not to be missed on stage, though others think the material is better suited for a film.


Backstage A+
(David Sheward) Though its plot sounds like one you might hear at a Hollywood pitch meeting, Keith Huff's "A Steady Rain" offers one of the most powerful theatrical experiences in many seasons. This is mainly due to John Crowley's tight direction and the masterful performances of a pair of movie hunks best known for their adventure capers. Daniel Craig and Hugh Jackman prove they are much more than James Bond and Wolverine in this heavyweight smackdown... Jackman and Craig endow Denny and Joey with a deep history, vivifying Huff's backstory. Jackman displays an almost animalistic rage that comes from a different place than Wolverine's. Denny cares deeply for his family, and that provides the justification for his criminal actions. Jackman pulls off an acting miracle in managing to make this violent racist sympathetic. Craig gives Joey the same demons but convincingly portrays his questioning, unsatisfied nature, which forces him to fight them.

Talkin' Broadway A+
(Matthew Murray) What Huff does, and what makes this an ideal vehicle for high-caliber stars, is allow plenty of room for uncertainty within the "I did this, I did that" limits of the form. The guys may speak mostly to us, but they're working separately, weaving threads that only occasionally overlap. One might utter a statement the other needs to correct, openly or surreptitiously; a key detail or fact that one leaves out may not be an accident, as the other proves later. You believe, from the first moment to the last, that these men have lived their lives intertwined, and Huff uses that to fuel his story, showing how their friendship is challenged, bent, broken, and repaired, almost entirely within the natural subtext of two guy's guys who aren't exactly apt to reveal their deepest feelings. So even though Joey and Denny tell us everything they do, there are an unusual number of gaps when it comes to explaining why. That's where adventurous actors with think-on-their-feet stage experience become essential, and Jackman and Craig are able to scribble on this blank slate of a play right to the edges, in ways uniquely theirs. The betrayed exasperation Jackman brings to Denny's chastising the world's lack of logic as walls start collapsing around him could come from no one else: part whine, part commandment, all machismo that's more blood oath than affect but more ineffectual than commanding. Craig is utterly convincing as both the wispy Joey who needs Denny to fight his battles and the more confident man who's unafraid to take what he wants, even if he shouldn't have it - his overflow of gentleness and absence of malice prevent you from detesting behavior that, by the end of the play, has become highly questionable. But Jackman and Craig know when to leave space blank, as well - they present Denny and Joey as empty vessels that only the other can fill, which opens so many doors for the triumphs and tragedies the play documents over the course of one rainy summer. And they keep you guessing throughout. Craig plays the secretly opportunistic Joey as completely without guile; Jackman imbues Denny with a good-natured humor and reluctant charm, when the character seems to demand off-putting brusqueness and even violence in the way he approaches his daily affairs. These choices go against expectations, but they work because they help you understand both men better. Violating the script's apparently stated precepts in this way is not a beginner's choice, and it requires real chops to pull off when the material itself is less than absolutely scintillating.

Newsday A
(Linda Winer) Huff, a longtime Chicago playwright, has clearly hit the dreamboat jackpot for his Broadway debut. This is a tight, mean story about a petty, mean world, unflinchingly staged (with surprisingly good Chicago accents) by British director John Crowley ("The Pillowman") on a bare stage that, every so often, is shadowed by the scary/sad outline of tenements. The writing is part second-generation David Mamet, part TV cop show - not profound or wildly original, but commanding, with both a bully-boy swagger and a closely observed sense of casual ugliness. Jackman and Craig mostly sit in chairs under what appear to be interrogation lamps. They tell their versions of events in the past tense, sometimes to us, sometimes to each other. Jackman - radically transformed from his Tony-winning song-and-dance flamboyance as "The Boy From Oz" - boasts black patent-leather hair and the insolent air of entitlement as Denny, the family man and alpha dog in this friendship. Craig - an experienced London stage actor but a genuine discovery for Broadway - plays the milder-mannered Joey, a lonely alcoholic who seems to want to hide behind his bland mustache. He may be a less flashy character, but his drives are no less primal.

Variety A
(David Rooney) The Broadway staging is inevitably inflated by star power, but Crowley has maintained the arresting spareness the work seems to dictate. There are monolithic setpieces as Chicago tenements and seedy alleys loom in the background, conjured in rich detail by designer Scott Pask out of the blackness and lit with surgical precision by Hugh Vanstone. And there's abstemious use of Mark Bennett's moody soundtrack, feeding the hardboiled film-noir atmosphere. But the expert balance of visual austerity with occasional descriptive embellishment -- echoing the director's work on "The Pillowman" -- never intrudes on the play's emotional intimacy. Likewise the performances are not star turns but complex characterizations that peel back layer upon layer of reticent self-protection to reveal increasingly uncomfortable truths... Crowley places the two actors on chairs in the stark space under interrogation-room lights, as if debriefing the audience. Via passages of dialogue that are both gruff and poetic, Huff builds on that exposure to dig into the murky bonds of male friendship and brotherhood -- the shifting lines separating loyalty from betrayal, love from resentment, honor from shame. Craig and Jackman are onstage for the entire intermissionless 85 minutes, and Crowley is judicious in knowing when to keep them pinned to their seats and when to have them move restlessly about the stage or physicalize the events they're recounting. When one man is talking, the other is always watching, intent on his partner's every word, waiting to jump in with a conflicting perspective.

On Off Broadway A
(Matt Windman) "A Steady Rain," Keith Huff's two-actor star vehicle about a pair of overwhelmed cops, was destined to be a hit as soon as its film celeb cast was announced. But as it turns out, the intimate drama is engaging, gritty and even poetic. In other words, much better than expected. And in John Crowley's minimalistic but effective production, Hugh Jackman and Daniel Craig are delivering thoroughly intense performances that captivate on a level of high ferocity.

USA Today A
(Elysa Gardner) The traits that made Hugh Jackman and Daniel Craig obvious fits for Wolverine and James Bond are not, however, their most valuable assets here. True, the actors' rugged masculinity lends credibility to their portraits of Chicago police officers who have seen their share of scuffles, both in and out of the line of duty. But Rain's Denny and Joey, lifelong buddies turned partners in law enforcement, are neither superheroes nor glamorous anti-heroes. They're regular Joes who are challenged — as cops, as friends, as human beings — by a confluence of devastating developments. They require a more subtle physical and emotional fluency — the kind that enabled Craig and Jackman to carve three-dimensional men out of sexy action figures, and has served both stars in a wide variety of stage and screen roles.

The Telegraph A
(Claire Stenhouse) Some saw it as a casting stroke of genius, others as a cynical attempt to beat the recession and cash in on the stars’ popularity. Craig, as his screen alter-ego James Bond, usually comes with an array of fancy gadgets courtesy of Q. Jackman, otherwise known as Wolverine in the X-Men movies, seldom appears without his flashing metal claws. But anyone fearing that the two actors needed a battery of special effects to make an impact was proved wrong. From the moment the curtain went up until the play’s poignant end, they held the audience spellbound... he duo gave a tight, nuanced performance, complete with convincing Chicago accents. Jackman, who won a Tony Award for his 2004 Broadway debut in The Boy From Oz, was enthralling as the big hearted but corrupt cop. By turns humorous, dark and tense, the actors handled Keith Huff’s evenly paced drama, directed by John Crowley, with a skill and subtlety which rarely gets chance to shine in Hollywood.

New Jersey Newsroom A-
(Michael Sommers) Although the modest play is little more than a conventional cop drama, its troubled characters and the painful incidentals of their fraying ties should satisfy anybody not expecting to watch the stars interpret Shakespeare. Their expert performances lend the slick play credibility. His good looks disguised with a bad haircut and bushy mustache, Craig infuses his brooding loner Joey with a wistful sort of he-man sensitivity. Hands blurring in constant motion, Jackman's foul-mouthed Italian paisano Denny is a simmering stew of mixed emotions. The actors' interplay is swift, true and confident and their final face-off reduces the audience to a hush.

LA Times A-
(Charles McNulty) Now these fellows could charm the pants off half (if not three-quarters) of the audience just by reading the proverbial phone book. Obviously, the play here isn't the thing, and Huff lets his plot ride roughshod over his characters. But under John Crowley’s spare and precise direction, the actors earn their adulation, magnifying what’s most gripping about Huff’s writing even when the drama, stretched thin with bang-bang incident, becomes considerably less believable over time. And for those worried about authenticity, fear not: Although Jackman is from Australia and Craig is from England, they slip into the American reality of their characters as if it were a second skin... In an intimate theater, “A Steady Rain” probably seems larger than it is. But in a Broadway house, the play’s smallness is unmistakable — a vehicle for stars to shine in and not much more. Yes, it’s a tad disappointing that the work that lured this unexpected tag-team to Broadway is comparatively so unchallenging. It's even more so when you consider the leads' impressive international theater backgrounds — Jackman in musicals (“Oklahoma!,” a Tony-winner for “The Boy from Oz”), Craig in groundbreaking drama (Tony Kushner’s “Angels in America,” Caryl Churchill’s “A Number”). What New York producer in his or her right mind would have turned down their request to do something more ambitious?

TheaterMania A-
(David Finkle) While their Chicago accents may not be perfect, Craig and Jackman -- best known to film fans as James Bond and Wolverine respectively -- are giving movie-star hungry ticket buyers enough of what they want (other than taking their shirts off). In doing so, they easily make the intermissionless 90-minute work a satisfying time in the theater. Craig, sporting a less-than-attractive mustache and comb-over (which makes him resemble Ted Levine on Monk) is a stage natural who is solidly authentic in every utterance and movement, while Jackman once again displays the kind of masculine grace blended with gruff virility that guarantees uninterrupted attention from the audience.

The Observer A-
(Jesse Oxfeld) Directed by John Crowley, it’s an episode of The Shield, played in flashback. It manages to pull at heartstrings—not once but twice at the preview I attended, the audience sighed aloud at sad plot revelations—without making us care much about the characters, who are one-dimensionally unpleasant from the moment we meet them: One’s an asshole, the other’s a sad sack. But as a showcase for these two actors, the thing seems almost purpose-built. Both actors adopt the long vowels and gruff manner of South Side Chicago. Mr. Jackman’s doesn’t quite work; there’s always a hint of his natural Australian accent. Indeed, while he gives Denny the necessary braggadocio and wounded charisma, he never stops being Hugh Jackman: a showman who’s playing a part, if very competently. Mr. Craig, however, nails the accent, and nails the role. He is spectacular, burying himself inside a cheap suit and floppy mustache and becoming a beaten-down, working-class Midwesterner. There’s no trace of James Bond; he has turned himself into William H. Macy.

TheaterScene.net B
(Victor Gluck) Nothing the actors do suggest the Chicago setting. Considering the amount of beer the men claim to have drunk, the actors are much too trim in the waistline to be credible. Of the two, Craig is more believable. Dressed in a suit and tie, with a very noticeable mustache, Craig is almost unrecognizable from his previous roles. His subtle performance as the follower Joey, who is highly ethical, makes this a very complex character. Although Jackman has usually played bigger than life heroic characters in his films, Denny is a brother to many of his action roles, and this doesn’t seem much of a stretch for this talented actor. While it is possible to forget Craig’s résumé while watching him as Joey, Jackman’s performance does not obliterate his screen persona as Denny. While the stage is empty except for the two chairs on which the men sit, at key points in the play, Scott Pask’s magnificent depiction of Chicago tenements are revealed behind them, beautifully lit by Hugh Vanstone. So startling and effective are these towering designs that they are almost a distraction from the intense, small focus the play had kept on the two actors. Mark Bennett is responsible for the original mood music that punctuates several dramatic moments. The steady rain that is describes as continuing throughout the story is not made a very conscious element in Bennett’s sound design.

Hollywood Reporter B
(Frank Scheck) It all comes across like an elongated pitch meeting for an over caffeinated buddy-cop movie that might be directed by Sidney Lumet or Martin Scorsese. That the play works to the extent it does is a testament to the actors. Jackman, in his first New York stage appearance since his very different turn as Peter Allen in "The Boy From Oz," is in full macho-bluster mode and is hugely entertaining. Craig is even more of a revelation. The British actor tends to be a bit recessive in his film roles (his James Bond, to my mind, is a stiff). But here, making his American stage debut, he delivers a highly convincing, engaging turn, complete with a terrific Chicago accent, which works beautifully. The two actors display a terrific chemistry together that should well translate to the inevitable screen version.

The Times B-
(Matt Wolf) Jackman’s performance is the question mark that hovers over this adroit staging by John Crowley, the London-based director. Playing the slightly larger of the show’s two roles, Jackman is charm incarnate even when the play begins to chill. It may simply be that the actor best known as Wolverine cuts too innately glamorous a presence to give full due to the downward spiral of a racist cop called Denny, though I for one would love to see Jackman’s Coriolanus or Antony. He’s a fine actor, here handed an assignment that doesn’t entirely fit. Craig, intriguingly, inhabits his part like a character actor unexpectedly turned star who has been given the chance to remind us of his serious acting chops. Jackman, in turn, has become so popular a personality, especially in America, that it’s more difficult to envisage him on the seamy free-fall into the abyss that is Denny’s fate.

Chicago Tribune B-
(Chris Jones) If only Hugh Jackman, the co-star of this two-man play about cops whose personal relationships become entangled with the crime on Chicago’s streets, could have managed a similar transformation. He does not. Denny, Joey’s racy partner and one of those angry men addicted to life on the edge, is a tough nut for the preternaturally handsome, articulate and charismatic Jackman to crack. Sure, he finds the energy and charm of the guy (the kind of early-peaker we all knew at high school), and the drive of Jackman’s personality certainly helps this simple Chicago play land with a mainstream New York audience. And land it does. Over the course of 90 minutes of dueling monologues, Denny goes to seed, like all guys of his type eventually go to seed, before our very eyes. Steinmeyer had that down cold. But you do not stare up at Jackman’s well-toned body and Hollywood style and picture a desperate man on morphine, flailing between a wife and hooker, watching his cocksure routine turn to dust. You could. Jackman, a formidable talent, has it in him. But he has to be more willing to mess himself up, to deconstruct his own celebrity persona and stare his own inevitable decay in the face. On the rough Chicago streets, as Huff’s unstinting play suggests, time is truncated, and a cop can grow old and tired on a single night. That’s what this script demands. Without that element, it just comes off as a well-written police procedural, which I suspect is how it will be viewed by some tastemakers in New York, although in Chicago I thought this script also offered a great deal more.

Lighting & Sound America C+
(David Barbour) Huff knows how to keep the surprises coming, and, on its best and most basic level, A Steady Rain has the page-turning fascination of a good crime novel. But the playwright makes a basic mistake, I think, in having Denny and Joey speak directly to us, narrating the tale by turns, and only occasionally acting out a scene together. Denny's moral corner-cutting and Joey's silence have trapped them in a web of complicity and retaliation, and every attempt at extrication only tightens their constraints. Given their circumstances, they should be choking with rage and/or tongue-tied with guilt. But the script requires them to deliver the story with such fluency that its darker emotions are smoothed over. The action climaxes in a profound, if necessary, act of betrayal -- but you never feel the full power of it, because it all seems so after-the-fact. The script is full of horrors, all of them held at arm's length. Because of this slight distancing effect, you start to notice just how contrived the narrative is and how brazenly Huff tries to score his points. Thus, a concealed case of gangrene doubles as a symbol for moral decay, and an innocent victim is found clutching a puppy. Instances of violence against children are employed, frequently and shamelessly. Stars that they are, Craig and Jackman effortlessly seize your attention; employing surprisingly good Chicago accents, they create a believably troubled friendship. To my mind, Craig's Joey has the edge, pacing the stage and using awkward hand gestures to create a guy who isn't really at home in his own skin. There's a chilling look in his eye as he begins to make calculations that are both thoroughly logical and -- he is forced to admit -- utterly selfish.

Entertainment Weekly C+
(Lisa Schwarzbaum) The sight and sound of Daniel Craig and Hugh Jackman on stage, grappling with flat Chicago accents as Windy City cops in Keith Huff's two-man play, A Steady Rain, is so startling that it takes a minute to handle the truth. The British movie star famous as James Bond and the Aussie movie star famous as Wolverine are appearing on Broadway in the kind of slight, artificially structured American chamber piece that normally lives on a small Off-Broadway stage. And even after the shock passes, the dissonance distracts. Why are these international stars playing parochial characters inferior to any cop on TV?

The Daily News C+
(Joe Dziemianowicz) The cop tale careens from bad to worse to horror movie. Imagine a putrid police blotter steeped in drugs, stabbings, baby-killing and cannibalism. Stirring stuff, to a degree. Because we only hear about the incidents, the visceral impact is muted. And since there's no emotional keyhole to let us in, the saga hits the head, but not the gut or heart. The moments when the play is most alive are when Scott Pask's moody set pieces come to light. Amid all the grisly imagery, Huff seeks to comment on what it means to serve and protect — as a cop, husband, father and friend. But the drama is so fraught with calamity, even within that title metaphor, it gets contrived. That's what happens when you jam 12 episodes of a TV series about a rogue cop into 90 minutes.

The New York Times C+
(Ben Brantley) Previously seen at the Powerhouse Theater at Vassar and the Chicago Dramatists (with far less famous actors), “A Steady Rain” takes up a sit-dram setup made popular in gritty plays and movies of the 1930s: Best friends since childhood, in the same tough neighborhood, find themselves on different sides of the law and in love with the same woman! Clark Gable, William Powell, James Cagney and Pat O’Brien all played one or the other side of this equation on screen. After a decade or so of hard use, that formula looked threadbare and made for parody, though it has persisted and can still be glimpsed in episodes of “Law & Order” and similar television fare. If Mr. Huff has not managed to reweave this premise with any surprising threads, he has packed it with enough lurid incident to fill a season of “Law & Order.”... Mr. Crowley, who brilliantly staged Martin McDonagh’s “Pillowman” on Broadway in 2005, directs with restraint, elegance and limited imagination. Working with the accomplished team of Scott Pask (scenery and costumes), Hugh Vanstone (lighting) and Mark Bennett (music and sound), he occasionally has Joey and Denny’s memories assume three-dimensional form, with mean streets and forbidding woods materializing from the darkness behind them. He needn’t have bothered. Nobody goes to “A Steady Rain,” which ends its hot-ticket limited run on Dec. 6, to look at scenery.


NY1
C+
(Roma Torre) Despite its high ambitions, it's just too plot-heavy and unbelievable to feel like much more than a good night of TV viewing. Unlike TV though, the characters break the fourth wall and tell their stories directly to the audience for practically the entire 90-intermissionless minutes. Only occasionally do they address each other. It's an interesting concept that amounts to story theater. Director John Crowley gives it all its worth, spiking the suspense with fevered pacing aided by Scott Pask's realistic inner city setting. But, of course, it all comes down to the performances, and both Craig and Jackman are solid stage actors. Craig nails the accent a little bit better than Jackman, who occasionally gives his lines an Aussie inflection. But they handle the clipped banter well, and both are convincing as street-hardened cops.

The Village Voice C
(Michael Feingold) Under John Crowley's direction, the two stars present the increasingly far-fetched tale with an amiable diffidence that lets them show you their acting ability, as each gets into his character's moments of personal pain, while carefully keeping the sordid events at a distance. These two clean-cut, good-looking guys—who wouldn't want to spend time with them, even though one's supposed to be a near-psychopathic drughead thug and the other his ineffectual, booze-hazed enabler? The realities of a gangrenous leg, a kick to the jaw of a prone suspect, or a dead baby in a garbage bag are not dwelled upon, merely reported as data, added to the increasingly high pile-up of narrated events. The line that divides cop reality from crime-corn gets crossed constantly, with a few actual police-news moments dropped in for good measure, including a famous incident from the Jeffrey Dahmer case, moved south from Milwaukee for the occasion. It doesn't particularly add up to anything but a nice little shudder, for those able to snag tickets. Jackman, with his wonderful easy fluidity, shows once again that he's a natural-born stage star; Craig, saddled with a less showy role and an English-prof toothbrush mustache, does lots of wild gesticulating before settling into his character and showing that he, too, has what the stage demands. One wouldn't mind seeing either man in an actual play sometime.

Associated Press C
(Michael Kuchwara) Superheroes can do just about anything on screen, courtesy of the special effects department. But put them on stage and their dependency on a solid script becomes more apparent. A case in point: Daniel Craig, filmdom's current James Bond, and Hugh Jackman, the movies' Wolverine, go up against a minor, melodramatic little play called "A Steady Rain" by Keith Huff. And while both men, particularly Craig, acquit themselves well, they can't turn the 90-minute evening into anything more than a chance to see two big-time movie stars emoting up close in a pulpy, plot-heavy entertainment.


New York Post
C-
(Elisabeth Vincentelli) Huff's idea of thinking outside the box begins and ends with his naming the Irish character Joey (Craig) and the Italian one Denny (Jackman). Everything else is steeped in hoary convention, from the flashback structure to the tone, dripping with tough-guy attitude... Stuck with two guys reminiscing for 90 minutes, director John Crowley ("The Pillowman") resorts to pulling Scott Pask's beautiful sets in and out of the shadows at key dramatic points. It's impressive but feels like a desperate attempt to give the audience something to look at. In the end, it all circles back to the middling writing. Typically, a big plot point revolves around the fact that Denny and Joey believe a blond surfer dude is, as he claims, the uncle of a distraught Vietnamese boy. Are we really meant to think these guys are morons? Craig and Jackman were clearly eager to appear onstage together. Too bad they picked a clunky squad car for a vehicle.

Bloomberg News C-
(John Simon) Craig and Jackman work conspicuously hard and John Crowley, who also directed “The Pillowman,” comes up with as much movement as conceivable under the circumstances. Still, I could not join some spectators’ audible gasps and moans. I remained more aware of the evening’s drizzle outside the theater than of the steady, meant-to-be-exacerbating rain mentioned onstage. Not unlike Hugh Vanstone’s lighting, which, as scripted, indicates changes of time and locale by dimming or intensifying, my lukewarm involvement came and went. And when it was on, it was mostly for the effort the two stars must have expended learning an alien language so fluently and flawlessly. The program informs us that “A Steady Rain” is the first installment of a Chicago cop trilogy already completed and presumably raring to go into production. I am not holding my breath.

NYMag C-
(Scott Brown) Jackman does an excellent job playing a man who heedlessly jumps the median between superego and id, in the best tradition of the self-mythologizing American sociopath. The erstwhile X-man has never spelled danger, with or without muttonchops, yet Craig looks scared enough of him to keep us on edge. Don’t expect to see a trace of the unsettlingly marmoreal Bond: Craig locates Joey’s peculiar strength in his unrepentant vulnerability. (Kinda wish they’d switch off roles on alternate nights, True West−style.) But Huff’s testimonial conceit grows frustrating after a while—Denny and Joey are stuck reciting stacks of three-by-five storyboard cards when all we want is to see these guys effin’ go at each other. Even as the play thins though, Jackman and Craig know how to make a mud puddle look hip-deep—a great help to any audience member trying to square his $125 ticket price with the fact that he saw all of this last night on TNT. I mean, come on: foreboding rain? A loose cannon paired with a Schmo Friday? A man who “has every right to do anything it takes to protect his family”? A sinister figure, lightning-limned in the doorway? This is a basic-cable-grade stuff, Mr. Huff. It’s not even HBO. It’s TV. You’ve got a voice. Go get a subject.

The New Yorker C-
(Hilton Als) All that will stay with you when you leave the theatre is the fact that you have just watched two movie stars—Australia’s Hugh Jackman and Britain’s Daniel Craig—try on Midwestern accents like some kind of drag. Jackman gives it all he’s got—he’s a physical actor, who finds his character in movement—but Craig understands how to work with stillness. He can express his character’s guilt by making his body appear tight and wounded and expansive all at once. Although, by appearing live, these two are taking a chance, the play falls well within their comfort zone: it’s as neatly plotted as any Hollywood movie written by committee (and is now slated to become one).

Washington Post D+
(Peter Marks) What Jackman and Craig describe might come across as more entertaining or shocking if it did not feel as if it were a compressed version of the narratives of a dozen TV shows, from "Homicide: Life on the Street" to "The Wire," that have tried to get at the moral ambiguity of police work. Or perhaps if the stories were being told in a smaller theater, by a pair of actors of working-Joe countenance, able to convey in their gazes and intonations more of the soul-withering wear and tear of patrolling a beat in a bad part of town. As it is, the playwright takes a graphic-novel approach, overloading us with depictions of violence, as if he feels the need to offer up explosive images in every panel. By the time Jackman's Denny polishes off the last credulity-defying anecdote about the wanton discharge of a weapon or the final breaths of an innocent, the surfeit of exposition has numbed us into indifference. For all its modish, stripped-down staginess, "A Steady Rain" is presented as that timeworn convention, a star vehicle. It might be an opportunity for audiences to see in-vogue movie actors in the flesh, but otherwise it's an opportunity squandered.

Time Out New York D-
(David Cote) This epitome of “event theater”—which in terms of writing is no event at all—raises a bigger question: Can producers not exploit brute celebritude for greater good? A Steady Rain is pulling down more than $1 million a week because starstruck hordes want nothing more than to be in the presence of the hunky duo; I wish they wanted more. Still, if the masses will swarm to anything, why not give them art? Why not put Craig and Jackman in a decent play, perhaps a double bill of The Dumb Waiter and The Zoo Story? Hell, I’d rather watch them enact the screenplay of Lethal Weapon than Huff’s cliché-filled pile of good-cops-gone-bad tropes.

Backstage A+ 14; Talkin' Broadway A+ 14; Newsday A 13; Variety A 13; On Off Broadway A 13; USA Today A 13; The Telegraph A 13; New Jersey Newsroom A- 12; LA Times A- 12; TheaterMania A- 12; The Observer A- 12; TheaterScene.net B 10; Hollywood Reporter B 10; The Times Online B- 9; Chicago Tribune B- 9; Lighting & Sound America C+ 8; EW C+ 8; The Daily News C+ 8; The New York Times C+ 8; NY1 C+ 8; The Village Voice C 7; AP C 7; New York Post C- 6; Bloomberg News C- 6; NYMag C- 6; The New Yorker C- 6; Washington Post D+ 5; TONY D- 3; TOTAL: 265/28 = 9.46 (B-)
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Monday, September 28, 2009

Othello

GRADE: D+

By William Shakespeare. Directed by Peter Sellars. Skirball Center. (CLOSED)

Convention-rattling director Peter Sellars--or "Shockheaded Peter," as CurtainUp's Simon Saltzman memorably dubs him--divides critics again with his modern-dress, high-concept, "post-racial" take on Shakespeare's tragedy. Saltzman leads a small chorus of advocates thrilled by Sellars' stark, stripped-down staging and the performances of leads Philip Seymour Hoffman, John Ortiz, and Jessica Chastain. The praise drops off pretty sharply from there, though: A handful of critics duly admire the production's intentions more than their execution, but the majority alternately mock and deplore both the show's confused ideas and their lugubrious four-hour realization. In the course of our reading, we feel compelled to note that Time Out's crossword nut Adam Feldman teaches us a new vocabulary word ("fulgurant," meaning "dazzling") and that Bloomberg's grouchy John Simon, seldom so offensive as when he's offended, is in rare form.*


*Note: The above summary initially accused John Simon of insulting Lisa Colon-Zayas' weight while failing to mention Hoffman's girth. As a commenter quickly pointed out, Simon indeed calls Hoffman "potbellied."

CurtainUp A-
(Simon Saltzman) Boldly envisioned and provocatively executed...Unmoored (no pun intended) by Sellars from the past, the trappings are minimalist but awesomely high-tech and its characters are a decidedly and purposefully multi-racial mix. While audiences may enjoy and benefit from a handed-out brochure that contains background and commentary by Sellars and Barry Edelstein, who directs The Public Theater's Shakespeare Initiative, the staging speaks for itself...We are meant to hear every word and head mikes on all the actors make this possible, even as stand-alone microphones and cell phones are also used to great and even amusing effect...We are thrust into a world in which the characters who we know traditionally are now seen in the light and images of modern relationships and politics...Other questions surface during the course of the play. Is Iago's marriage to Emilia the way that he has devised to indirectly satisfy his urge to have sex with Othello? Is there really an unspoken but inferred indication of a thing going on between Othello and Cassio?...Sellars certainly brings us more food for thought about a play about which we thought we had all the answers...Four hours in the theater have rarely passed by so swiftly or so thrillingly.

Gothamist B+
(John Del Signore) Chilling...[Hoffman's] commanding performance transcends the cliche notion of Iago as one-dimensional villain, and is charged with a blistering intensity that boils over into rage more frequently than one sees in his film roles. But occasionally all the shouting feels repetitive, and just a little unearned; during the interval one audience member was heard remarking, "They should have changed the name of the play to OthYELLo"...All in all, it's a bracing, well-measured interpretation, and each member of the talented ensemble holds their own alongside the two powerhouse stars...Ultimately, your enjoyment of this Othello largely rests on how enamored you are with Hoffman's prodigious gifts, balanced against your willingness to sit for four hours of Shakespeare. It's Sellars's considerable achievement that the pacing never drags, but with a two-hour-and-fifteen minute first act, you'll definitely want to limit your fluid intake before the show.

Newsday B
(Linda Winer) There is a stripped-down, stark intelligence at work in Peter Sellars' updated Washington rethinking of "Othello," which boasts an unsettling, altogether captivating anti-star turn by Philip Seymour Hoffman as Iago to John Ortiz's slick and confident Moor. Alas, by the time the project has rethought Shakespeare's tragedy and rethought the rethinking, four hours have passed more as a lengthy psycho-political exercise than a full-blown adventure...The willful soul of this eight-actor, multiethnic staging - a coproduction of The Public Theater and Hoffman's base at the LAByrinth theater - challenges the very essence of what we know as a play about racial outsider-ness and the manipulation of power through jealousy...In other words, Sellars tries to solve the inherent problems of "Othello" by making it a play about something else - a rehearsal-hall meditation on mutual culpability in the post-Bush, supposedly post-racial Obama world. If the actors were as fascinating as Hoffman, we would have less time to question the concept.

Theatermania B-
(Dan Balcazo) Peter Sellars makes a number of bold choices...Unfortunately, many of them are not only ineffective, they don't even make coherent sense...[Hoffman] brings an emotional depth to his role, sometimes coming off more as a wounded child rather than an evil villain...Sellars' most egregious script meddling comes with the combining of the roles of Bianca and Montano (with a few lines from the clown thrown in for good measure), played by Saidah Arrika Ekulona...Indeed, the subtexts that various actors within the production attempt to portray often go against the grain of Shakespeare's words...Sellars has paced the show in a slow, deliberate manner, contributing to the production's four-hour running time. Such a strategy rightly places emphasis on the text, and several of the lines and their meanings are clearer here than in other stagings of the play that I've seen. Yet, the slowness of the actors' delivery of the words also has the unfortunate effect of robbing the play of forward momentum.

Talkin' Broadway C+
(Matthew Murray) Director Peter Sellars and a largely astonishing cast, led by Philip Seymour Hoffman and John Ortiz, have stripped the language down to its barest essence and are delivering some of the most natural-sounding Shakespeare I’ve ever heard. Whether this is a good thing is another question entirely...It’s so exciting to hear Shakespeare distilled in this way that there are moments you’re too absorbed in how the lines are being said to pay attention to what they mean. Alas, that’s what Sellars seems to be counting on...The care that’s been taken in emphasizing the play’s vocal component have led to not just uniquely thoughtful line readings, but also turgid pacing and endless pauses that ensure you feel every second of the four-hour running time...What’s far more damaging is that all their succulent speech has nothing whatsoever to do with Sellars’s interpretation, which itself has nothing to do with Othello...His ideas are all over the map.

Variety C
(Marilyn Stasio) Quirky is a long way from innovative, and Sellars misfires here with a fusillade of theatrical effects that, while initially arresting, fail to hit any obvious conceptual target. The most provocative thing about this eccentric production, in fact, proves to be Philip Seymour Hoffman's offbeat casting as Iago...Hoffman makes canny use of his unprepossessing appearance, wearing it like a costume to dupe the rubes...Ortiz effortlessly conveys Othello's sweet and trusting nature, along with that vein of human decency that makes him an endearing hero. But that interpretation only scratches the surface of his complex character and unkindly reveals what a stretch this role is for the actor...While non-traditional casting can bring new dimension to a character and expand the meaning of a play, willy-nilly casting of a work that deals so specifically with race (as if people of color were not hyper-sensitive to the profound social and political implications of skin-tone variations) is not "color-blind." It's a distortion of two realities--the play's and our own.

Backstage C-
(David Sheward) Baffling...This four-hour production is freighted with so much extra baggage, the central power struggle between the Moor and his scheming subordinate Iago is obscured...All this extraneous nonsense could be dismissed if there were a strong lead, but John Ortiz's Othello is more a second lieutenant than a general. He lacks panache and the passion to convince us his Moor is capable of tragic obsession with his wife's imagined infidelity. His hysteria seems forced, and he reaches its height in the middle of this long show, appearing all tuckered out by the climactic strangulation scene. Philip Seymour Hoffman's Iago is the center of the production and a much more complex creation...The women deliver more-consistent work. Jessica Chastain's gentle Desdemona, Liza Colon-Zayas' brooding Emilia, and Saidah Arrika Ekulona's intense Bianca, the composite role, make this seemingly endless slog worth sitting through. Ekulona, who was brilliant in last season's "Ruined," is to be commended for making sense of her mishmash of a part. Would that the director had done the same.

Time Out NY D+
(Adam Feldman) A Pyrrhic victory of directorial sensibility over sense. The production is unmistakably full of ideas, some of them contradictory, half of them interesting, the other half disastrous...Attenuated into four hours, the tragedy progresses as a herky-jerky sequence of screeches and lulls, then sleepwalks to a bloodless anticlimax...Dishonest Iago, played by the fulgurant Philip Seymour Hoffman, is the center of attention throughout, raging and seething like a red-hot volcano—or rather, given his awesomely unflattering costume, like a lime-green sack of potatoes—at what Sellars imagines is his wife’s infidelity. Hoffman too easily overpowers John Ortiz’s recessive Othello and Jessica Chastain’s elegant, brittle Desdemona...Sellars should be commended for trying to bring original thought to Othello; the problem is that the contrarian director—“this counter-caster,” to quote one of Iago’s insults—has done so neither wisely nor too well.

The New York Times D
(Ben Brantley) Exasperatingly misconceived...This production is wrongheaded less in the anarchic tradition of Dadaists making merry than in the reactionary mold of Depression-era MGM retailoring literary classics for mass consumption. Characters who might seem distractingly bigger than life have been shrunk to average proportions, so we can identify with them more fully as creatures of our time and place. Shakespearean titans: they’re just like us! The mighty, exotic general Othello and his diabolical flunky Iago have been stripped of their singularity, whether of greatness of spirit or capacity for evil. They’re ordinary guys here. Othello is a Latino soldier who has risen in the ranks but retains an aura of working-class humility; Iago, a sour schlemiel who has trouble controlling his temper...While retaining much of the original text, Mr. Sellars has also eliminated, conflated and rearranged characters to further his idea of the play as a portrait of life in the United States military in the 21st century...I failed to discern any special connection between this Othello and Iago.

Associated Press D-
(Michael Kuchwara) [Sellars'] imagination outraces the ability of his actors, including the usually eminently watchable Philip Seymour Hoffman, a performer of uncommon intelligence. That means the play, clocking in at a posterior-numbing four hours, is quite an ordeal, despite occasional bursts of inventiveness. It's high-concept time with ideas rather than Shakespeare's language or character ruling the day. But clever can take you only so far...It's chilly, to say the least, but then so is the minimal scenery, with Gregor Holzinger's high-tech designs dominated by banks of television screens including a section that serves as a bed...If a production is going to last four hours, it needs to dazzle with more than a director's novel, idiosyncratic musings...Bring a pillow.

Lighting & Sound America F+
(David Barbour) It's possible to scramble the play's racial politics and still make it work--but not if Othello isn't strongly defined as the other in some fundamental way...If Othello isn't, in some sense, a provocation to the world he inhabits -- because of his race, his pride, or his sexually charged relationship with Desdemona -- if he is just another cog in the military machine, the play has lost its basic underpinnings...Sellars is often criticized for adding irrelevancies to his productions, but here his method is subtractive. In seeking to impose a unified vision on the play, he strips out any distracting bits of color and contradictory emotion. It's not just that he flattens out a great text; he undermines its foundations. But then all the performances are delivered in the same flat-affect style...The most distressing thing about this Othello is that Sellars has abdicated any responsibility for shaping, pacing, and dramatizing this powerful, but slightly unwieldy, tragedy. The scenes all move at the same slow pace, the actors rarely, if ever, vary the tone -- the scenes of yelling seem thoroughly arbitrary -- and the script's basic emotions seem to have been left offstage.

New York Post F
(Elisabeth Vincentelli) Sellars' wretched show is both too much and not enough. In actuality, this supposedly daring Public Theater/Labyrinth Company production is a sheep in wolf's clothing. There's nothing genuinely radical onstage, only a cosmic void free of passion, insight and imagination. Surprisingly, considering some of the talent involved, the most basic level of craft is lacking. The only thing you'll find in abundance is time: The glacially paced show takes four hours to go nowhere...Even the set is preposterous -- dominated by a bed made of TV monitors, so when Othello and Desdemona (Jessica Chastain) roll around on it, it's like they're making out at Best Buy. Worse, the miscast actors are misdirected -- when in doubt, they shout their lines the way "American Idol" contestants fall back on melisma. Ortiz is pallid, Chastain ineffectual, and Ekulona (fantastic as the brothel owner in "Ruined") just glowers. As for Hoffman, his Iago is a socially maladjusted nerd in a tight top.

The Daily News F
(Joe Dziemianowicz) No matter that Oscar champ Philip Seymour Hoffman acts up as the original frenemy, Iago. Or that his longtime pal John Ortiz lays it on thick as Shakespeare's tragically jealous Moor...They're now adrift in this wearying reimagining by Peter Sellars, a director known for reinventing classics. Much of the action, set amid the upper ranks of an unnamed Obama-era government, plays out on a huge bed made up of 45 TV sets flashing ever-changing images. Like American flags. Bloody fingers. Crop circles? Whatever. Casting Oritz, who's of Puerto Rican descent, as Othello, and LeRoy McClain, who's black, as Cassio, is meant to expand the exploration of racism. Ironically, the subject seems practically nonexistent...The staging and acting pack all the oomph of "Melrose Place."

New York F
(Scott Brown) Arid, somnambulant...Despite a surging storm sewer of bold ideations, “reimaginings” and provocations aimed squarely at Bardolatrous purists, Sellars’s Othello has almost nothing intelligible to say. It’s obsessed only with its own “post”-ness. It is “postracial,” in that Othello is no longer a black man in a white world, but a light-skinned, racially indeterminate man in a casually multiracial Venice...This is a piquant enough starting-point, but Ortiz’s Othello, to the extent that he’s consistent at all, appears to be based on David Paterson—physically and constitutionally diminutive, an easily perplexed buffoon...There’s no overarching theatrical sense that Othello commands anyone or anything, nor that his jealousy and madness and insecurity might have epic consequences outside of his Lite-Brite bedroom...Everyone leaves a good three-minute buffer between lines of dialogue. Up that to five for Hoffman, for whom the bemused croak, the long pause, and the sudden roar serve as a slowly rotating lazy susan of lazy acting tricks...[His Iago] seems primarily to covet Othello’s bed—not for the power or the sex it represents, but for the convenient horizontal resting surface it furnishes.

Bloomberg News F-
(John Simon) Some updatings may have their merits but with Peter Sellars, all debts to reason are canceled. I have long denounced his depredations on the theater, but what he has concocted in New York with “Othello”...offends Shakespeare, common sense and decency. Sellars has reduced the cast to seven actors, mostly from LAByrinth...none of whom has the faintest inkling of how to speak verse and most of whom do not even manage anything passing for stage English...We get an Othello who is white and puny, as unheroic as he is unmoving and seen fornicating with Emilia, played by LAByrinth’s short and overweight Liza Colon-Zayas with a pronounced Latino inflection. Cassio, nonsensically, is played by a black actor, LeRoy McClain, of no particular appeal or distinction...Inanities abound.

small>CurtainUp A- 12; Gothamist B+ 11; Newsday B 10; Theatermania B- 9; Talkin' Broadway C+ 8; Variety C 7; Backstage C- 7; TONY D+ 5; The New York Times D 5; Associated Press D- 3; LS&A F+ 2; New York Post F 1; The Daily News F 1; New York F 1; Bloomberg News F- 0; TOTAL: 82/15=5.47 (D+)
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Friday, September 25, 2009

Killers and Other Family

GRADE: B-

By Lucy Thurber. Directed by Caitriona McLaughlin. (CLOSED)

FULL DISCLOSURE: Critic-O-Meter contributor Isaac Butler designed the sound for this production.
Samantha Soule gets universal praise for the physically and emotionally (and, in some critic's opinions: thankless) part of Lizzie, a PhD student whose abusive, rural past comes tumbling into her Manhattan apartment, threatening to upend her new life. Her brother Jeff and childhood friend/ex-boyfriend Danny need Lizzie to aid and abet their recent off-stage crimes. The violence that erupts earns fight choreographer David Anzeulo multiple plaudits. Most reviews also applaud the commitment and dexterity of the direction and acting, but often as a counterpoint to Thurber's script, which, though gripping, leaves some critics wondering if the terrifying provocation is worthwhile. We also find some interesting disagreement about Thurber's tonal shifts: the Village Voice makes an admiring comparison to Sam Shepard, but Time Out New York finds the heightened and realistic elements out of balance.




Village Voice A+
(James Hannaham) Lucy Thurber has given her excellent, gripping, and ambitious-yet-short Killers and Other Family a subtitle: "A play that functions as a waking nightmare." Fortunately, that description is misleading—the play's social awkwardness and violence ring utterly true, and its dips into surreality successfully intensify the drama ... Thurber's bracing, streamlined drama recalls Shepard or O'Neill, but spares us the former's image-making and the latter's verbosity. The nearly perfect cast can only barely restrain the play's wild heart.

Talk Entertainment A
(Oscar E. Moore) The acting is of the highest caliber. As all four actors embrace their roles totally we begin to get so involved (the hour and a half flies by) that they are no longer actors but those characters in a very nasty situation. Shane McRae especially is someone to fear. One look from him and you jump ... Aya Cash gives a tense, contained and most wonderfully vulnerable performance. But it is the main character of Lizzie that we see evolve from the calm and controlled person that she is trying so desperately to be to the almost manic and desperate person that she becomes in the presence of her past. It’s a wonderful nuanced performance given by Samantha Soule.

New York Post B+
(Elisabeth Vincentelli) This is thorny stuff, and Thurber tries to juggle too many themes. But there's also a sharp, ambitious intelligence at play here, and under the direction of Caitriona McLaughlin, the young cast handles it with aplomb. Cash and Soule, in particular, fearlessly throw themselves into the show's daunting physicality. As the actors take their bows, flushed and disheveled, you're left feeling emotionally battered yet intensely alive.

Nytheatre.com B+
(Kristin Skye Hoffman) ... the director, Caitriona McLaughlin, and the actors have masterfully created four characters who have completely different rhythms, are always interesting, and whom we somehow care about despite their despicability ... Frequently actors can be swept into the soap-opera-like drama that Thurber's script offers, and Cash avoids it beautifully ... Although Thurber's script seems overly cathartic, somewhat childish at times, and didn't give me a truly lasting message to take with me, the dialogue is strong and the characters are well written. The acting in this piece is worth a trip to theatre to witness the latest Rattlestick has to offer.

Theatre Mania B-
(Andy Propst) McRae makes Danny captivatingly sexy and feral ... Similarly, Soule seamlessly navigates Lizzie's complex relationships with her brother, old friend, and partner, as well as the twists and turns in Lizzie's behavior as her old life and new life crash together. It's an enormously powerful and deeply moving performance. Director Caitriona McLaughlin's fine work with her ensemble -- which includes solid and often affecting turns from Eaves and Cash -- is to be commended. The characters' often unpredictable behavior never seems unnatural, which helps immensely in mitigating the sometimes formulaic nature of Thurber's play. At the same time, though, McLaughlin's ültra-naturalistic approach to the material makes some of Thurber's absurdist flights difficult to accept ... As with the flourishes in Thurber's writing, [some of the] design elements don't gibe with the overarching realism of the production, and as a result, Lizzie's journey to her past and through her present never fully convinces.

Variety B-
(Marilyn Stasio) [B]y withholding all signs of humanity from these brutes, Thurber makes us wonder why someone doesn't just call the cops on them. That said, Caitriona McLaughlin helms a well-cast ensemble through a muscular production for Rattlestick ... There's a good bit of talk in this play -- and with the exception of Claire's wishy-washy dialogue, the sound of it is raw and authentic. But little of significance gets said. It's left to the physical signifiers to carry the story.

Backstage C
(Adam R. Perlman) The play lands as little more than a formal exercise in discomforting the audience—and it would be an unsuccessful exercise were it not for the bold, physically wrenching performances of Samantha Soule and Aya Cash ...
Thurber's dialogue is well-worn reunion material. People remember shared songs and routines. They drink to evade, then they drink to release. The familiarity of it makes for a decent contrast with the ensuing violence, but it also makes for a lot of boring chatter.

Time Out New York C-
(Helen Shaw) ... in Killers, Thurber’s usual skill at braiding the heightened and the realistic has frayed ... Throughout, the production’s strengths work against it. Director Caitriona McLaughlin drives everyone to a fever pitch, Soule maintains an hourlong freakout, and John McDermott’s set is picture-perfect. But the realism only makes the lyricism seem ridiculous (does backwoods brute Danny really want to “hear a story” while raping someone?), and the show can’t survive the juxtaposition. The tonal seesaw gets worse as the stakes rise.

Curtain Up D+
(Elyse Sommer) Whatever the changes in the script and the staging (the loud music is toned down, the set though a bit too bright and cheery is an effective visual warning not to take first appearances at face value), Killers and Other Family is still more a case study in psychotic behavior and neurotic neediness than a truly satisfying play ... While the cast and the director are to be commended for maximizing the play's tension, this production ultimately doeslittle to alter my original opinion. I'm therefore continuing this review with a re-post of my original take, followed by the current production notes.

Village Voice A+ 14; Talk Entertainment A 13; NYPost B+ 11; Nytheatre.com B+ 11; TheatreMania B- 9; Variety B- 9; Backstage C 7; Time Out New York C- 6; Curtain Up D+ 5. TOTAL: 85/9 = 9.44 (B-)
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In the Daylight

GRADE: B

By Tony Glazer. Directed by John Gould Rubin. McGinn-Cazale Theatre. (CLOSED)

Responses range widely on Tony Glazer's lurid dysfunctional-family drama, with the divide centering on whether its twists and turns are thrilling or wearying, convincing or ridiculous; in the middle are a few critics who seem to enjoy themselves despite their objections. Most admire Chris Barreca's striking set, but they're as divided on the cast and the direction as they are on the play itself.


Talk Entertainment A
(Oscar E Moore) The unfinished business is a delight to see unfold. Playwright Tony Glazer has written a clever, taut two act modern day Greek tragedy with a bit of Agatha Christie thrown in for good measure. In The Daylight is full of shadows and surprises...Under the bold direction of John Gould Rubin the actors flourish. They are on the edge of satire and melodrama but never fall into the abyss. They are all perfectly cast. I don’t want to spoil anything for you by giving away anything else. In The Daylight is a rare find. Exciting, suspenseful and grotesquely funny.

Show Business B+
(Bryan Clark) Sometimes goofy, definitely off-kilter and thoroughly amusing...The dialogue is mostly a cascade of one-liners, occasionally broken up by expositional speeches. Yet the talented cast makes it work. Concetta Tomei has a pitch-perfect tone as the play’s matriarch; Sharon Maguire is remarkably successful in the poorly drawn role of the sister; Ashley Austin Morris steals the show as the surprise visitor. Only Joseph Urla is miscast as the prodigal brother, giving a twitchy performance that belongs in a different production. Christopher Barreca’s monochrome foyer is the visual main attraction.

The New York Times C+
(Neil Genzlinger) The actors race through the first act of Tony Glazer’s “In the Daylight” as if they had someplace else to be, not even trying to establish rhythm or rapport and giving Mr. Glazer’s barbs and witticisms no chance to land. Maybe it’s because the entertaining parts of this dysfunctional-family story all lie in the second act, and they’re eager to get the audience there before it loses interest...When the secrets finally do drop in Act II, they’re pretty tasty. So is Ashley Austin Morris, who plays a fan of Martin’s who met him on the plane ride home.

Backstage C-
(Adam R. Perlman) Big themes and his milieu of family reunion, serious boozing, and dark secrets percolating are rendered ridiculous by a left turn into tawdry potboiler territory...Still, it's possible for a while to overlook the large plot holes and the unfocused direction from John Gould Rubin. A lot can be forgiven on account of sharp dialogue...The cast—which also includes Concetta Tomei as Marty's own Mommie Dearest, Sharon Maguire as his hard-bitten sister, and Jay Patterson as dad's skulking specter—handles the material well enough...Genre mixing can be tremendously effective, but there has to be a reason for it. Self-sabotage isn't good enough.

Talkin' Broadway D+
(Matthew Murray) There’s no way this could even be considered a passable play, but Glazer and his director, John Gould Rubin, ensure you’re having some kind of a good time even as you’re having a bad one...Glazer is obviously going the route Tracy Letts took in August: Osage County of injecting every imaginable sleazy horror he can into his dysfunctional family, but he does it with considerably less style, grace, and honesty. By the time you understand everything about how and why these people behave as they do, you’ve long since stopped caring.

Lighting & Sound America D+
(David Barbour) Glazer is not an untalented writer--his last piece, Stain, about an equally troubled family, certainly had its moments--but here his carving knife is thoroughly dull, and the constant drumbeat of mean-spirited, faux-sophisticated remarks quickly wears one down. The characters are the thinnest of cardboard--the alcoholic writer, the castrating mother--and everyone speaks in the same unpleasant, unfunny voice. The actors, under the direction of John Gould Rubin, attack their lines with vigor, to little effect. (There's an appallingly high level of screaming.)...The rest of the production is striking, if also occasionally annoying.

Talk Entertainment A 13; Show Business B+ 11; The New York Times C+ 8; Backstage C- 6; Talkin' Broadway D+ 5; Lighting & Sound America D+ 5; 48/5=9.6 (B)
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A Boy And His Soul

GRADE: A-

By Colman Domingo. Directed by Tony Kelly. Chor. Ken Roberson. The Vineyard Theatre. (CLOSED)

Though more than one critic describes Colman Domingo's solo coming-of-age story as "thin," critics overlook the small flaws in the production as Domingo draws them in with his multiple characters. Other highlights in the show as cited by the critics are Ken Roberson's spontaneous-looking choreography, Tom Morse's sound design for the soul music that anchors the stories, Marcus Doshi's disco lighting, and Rachel Hauck's record-filled basement set.


Talk Entertainment A+
(Oscar E. Moore) A perfect performer in the perfect theatre with a perfect show. A Boy and His Soul is a combination of stand up confessional and juke box musical that is always interesting and entertaining. And a great tribute to his mother. Mr. Domingo has a commanding presence and is irresistible. It is impossible not to like him and go along with his family history where he sometimes plays a scene being three characters at once... It is finely directed by Tony Kelly with much attention to detail. Choreography by Ken Roberson and terrific lighting design by Marcus Doshi and great sound design by Tom Morse all help the evening more along smoothly. As smooth as all those wonderful soul songs of the 70’s.

Newsday A+
(Linda Winer) Forget how weary we are of autobiographical solos, forget the limitations of their form and the inevitable redundance of all those heartfelt coming-of-age stories. Colman Domingo's "A Boy and His Soul" makes every one of them fresh and new again- even the coming-out phone call to his doting mother. This is a marvelous 90-minute tragicomedy, which just happens to be told by one astonishing actor/dancer/singer, who brings his entire family - and friends of families - to life in his long, spidery bones.

Backstage A
(David Sheward) Even though the template has been used before—gay youth finds himself through art and tentatively comes out to his confused but ultimately accepting loved ones—Colman brings a captivating freshness to the material, staged snappily by Tony Kelly. From Aretha Franklin's cry for respect to James Brown's declaration that this is a man's world to the Stylistics' velvety love anthems, each of the songs provides a lesson, a memory, or an opportunity to do the robot, electric boogie, or pop-and-lock. Domingo is a skillful dancer and performs Ken Roberson's energetic choreography with unflagging style. This guy is like a one-man "Dancing With the Stars." He's also a talented writer. He conjures dozens of memorable word pictures by citing specific details, including the color of the tumblers from which he and his mother would drink iced tea and the paprika sprinkled on the deviled eggs packed for road trips.

Talkin' Broadway A
(Matthew Murray) In this show, as superbly directed by Tony Kelly (the cofounder of Thick Description in San Francisco, where Domingo's play got its start), Domingo pulses with exactly that kind of estimable celestial brightness. Whether playing the deceptively complex character of himself, or any of a dozen or so family and friends he passed on the way to becoming him, he evinces a supple gift for mimicry that invokes without joking or judgment, yet nonetheless manages to cut directly to the comic truth of everyone from drag queens to his typically unfunny parents... As Domingo pushes and dances (via Ken Roberson's whimsical Friday-night choreography) across Rachel Hauck's homey-disco set, he reveals more and more himself of as a musician and a man, until you finally feel you understand all the various components of this talented and uniquely styled artist. In the last seven minutes or so, once Domingo has completed that process and made himself the master of his music, the show starts to falter a bit, and it doesn't send you out on quite the high it keeps you at for most of an hour and a half. But that's a minor imperfection - and what LP didn't have some tiny scratch that caused a slight skip that became a cherished listening moment? Throughout the rest of the show, Domingo makes sure you hear everything loud, clear, and totally cool, and that you walk out believing that soul music is just as much a part of the family as he does. You also can't help but feel a close kinship to him when he explains what he learned from his mother: "Keep a song in your heart and you will always find your way." Domingo has obviously taken that as his own life and playwriting philosophy, and created a journey into both his heart and the heart of soul music that you'll stay happily lost in for as long as it lasts.

Associated Press A
(Michael Kuchwara) Domingo, wearing a wide, megawatt smile, is a lithe, elastic performer who can move with a slow sensuality as well as with the haughty attitude of a high-flying diva. The buoyant choreography is the work of Ken Roberson. "A Boy and His Soul," directed by Tony Kelly, is told chronologically, with emphasis on musical highlights of Domingo's childhood. His introduction to Earth, Wind and Fire during an explosive summer concert, for example. "I was nine years old and I couldn't hide from the fate that soul music was about to deliver. I couldn't hide from my soul," he says. Another thing he couldn't hide from was his sexuality, unexpectedly coming out on his 21st birthday when his brother Rick took him to a strip club for a lap dance. The news travelled fast to his sister and parents. And there was a remarkable degree of acceptance, a matter-of-factness that allows the subject to ripple through the evening but never upend it.

Variety A
(Sam Thielman) Limbs flying, baritone rumbling, eyes flashing, the performer waxes eloquent on the subject of soul music. "I don't know about you, but when I was a kid I had no idea what 'You Sweet Sticky Thing' was all about," he admits. "Now I know. Kinda!" Domingo snarls that last word, grinning into it as he bites it off. It's this exact, unquenchable impulse to tie a bow around even the smallest reminiscence that frequently elevates "A Boy and His Soul" above several seasons' worth of similar one-man bioplays... When Domingo really gets down to business, though, he finds more nuanced moments that underscore his range as an actor. Everybody has seen a performer play his relatives during his coming-out story, but the moment in which Domingo remembers telling his brother Rick (played as an overweening macho crotch-grabber) he's gay is unexpectedly touching. He's prepared us for Rick to say something cruel to Jay (his youthful alter ego) or maybe just to leave him standing next to the strip club where he's chosen to out himself. But he hasn't prepared us for Rick's nonchalant validation. It's a nice moment, and not one that gets played often.

Lighting & Sound America A-
(David Barbour) Besides his attention-getting turn last season in Passing Strange, Domingo also appears on the Logo Network's Big Gay Sketch Show, where he has clearly honed his skills as a caricaturist. He cocks an arm at a 45-degree angle and tilts his head back to become his sister, loaded with attitude and spoiling for a fight. He shifts his upper body back, extends his legs, and lowers his voice a couple of octaves to become his grumpy, gravel-voiced stepfather. One of his most amusing characters sketches is of an aunt who stores various objects -- money, lottery tickets -- in her bra. These transformations are instantaneous and often last for only for the length of a single line. The rest of the time, he's a study in perpetual motion, irresistibly moving and grooving to that Motown beat; this is the rare solo show to come complete with its own choreographer -- in this case, the accomplished Ken Roberson. The storytelling is so genial, so evocative, and so touching that it's not until late in the evening that you realize that A Boy and His Soul isn't much more than a series of vivid family portraits attached to a rather weak throughlines. For this reason, the action lags a bit in the last ten minutes or so, when Domingo struggles to find an ending. It may be very well be that young JJ's childhood was entirely too happy for the purposes of drama. Still, as staged by Tony Kelly, A Boy and His Soul brings to life a world of feisty, funny characters who live by rules -- and a soundtrack -- of their own.

TheaterMania A-
(Andy Propst) Once the performer settles into a memory, Boy truly flies as he assumes a host of characters, delivering each with remarkable specificity. Particularly enjoyable are Domingo's renderings of his good ole boy stepfather, his sassy sister, and his somewhat thuggish brother. Domingo often shifts between these characters within the blink of the eye, and he's even able to create with remarkable ease his brother and sister sharing an imagined phone call. He brings these characters to life in a variety of "snapshots," including a particularly moving childhood memory of sitting in the backyard with his mother -- a sequence enhanced enormously by Marcus Doshi's gorgeously atmospheric lighting. Similarly, his memory of attending an Earth Wind and Fire concert delivers goosebumps. Meanwhile, a trip to a gay bar proves to contain one of the biggest laughs in the piece. As Domingo begins to come out to his family, the production develops some true emotional heft even as it retains his deliciously self-aware sense of humor.

The New York Times B+
(Charles Isherwood) He possesses a voice of remarkable range and dexterity. The burly masculine presence of his stepfather, Clarence, is vividly evoked in a dark booming baritone tinged with a gruff warmth. His mother, Edie, speaks with a refined hush that touchingly suggests the ambitions to culture she had to leave behind when she left college after becoming pregnant, and which she worked to instill and encourage in her son. His sister, Averie, is a borderline comic stereotype, the sassy girl with the tongue that slashes; Mr. Domingo doesn’t really even need to describe the hair and fingernails. He even evokes smaller characters with precise diction and intonation, like the perfect silky pitch of a radio D.J. sending smooth love songs out into the steamy summer night with a sexual purr. The writing can be scattered, but it bubbles along amiably as J. J., as Mr. Colman’s character is called by his family, recalls the way the music of the time infused their lives with a sense of belonging to a wider culture. In our niche-oriented musical era, with everyone attuned to the private mix tapes on their own iPods, that sense has mostly evaporated; the outpouring of nostalgia at the death of Michael Jackson points up how fragmented the culture of pop music has become. “A Boy and His Soul,” which is crisply directed by Tony Kelly and is enlivened by the slick choreography by Ken Roberson, slides into some worn grooves when Mr. Domingo moves into the story of his grappling with his sexuality. The writing remains lively and funny — his sister calls J. J. in high dudgeon, snippy and snappy not because he’s gay but because he told their brother first — yet the parameters of this narrative have become so familiar that it is hard to bring anything truly new to it.

The Daily News B+
(Joe Dziemianowicz) Domingo's experiences, whether it's his struggles with homosexuality or his mother Edie's mortality, aren't all that extraordinary.
What gives the show its unique groove is the star himself and his contagious enthusiasm for the soul, R&B and disco tunes that became the soundtrack to his life. Domingo, who was impressive in "Passing Strange," is commanding and endearing, whether he's acting, singing along to the music (he asks you to, as well) or shaking what his mama (and choreographer Ken Roberson) gave him. He's also an ace shape-shifter, morphing from playing himself to various relatives, with a change in his voice or body language or a telling gesture. Two fingers raised in a tight V comes to signal sassy big sister Averie, who was forever puffing Newports.

CurtainUp B+
(Julia Furay) A Boy and His Soul, written by Domingo and directed by Tony Kelly, is essentially a memoir of Domingo's childhood in 1970s Philadelphia. As he tells us at the show's start, this stroll through memory lane came about after he rediscovered his parents' abandoned record collection at his childhood home. As framing devices go, it's a little lame, but it effectively brings us to the meat of this staged memoir: Domingo's tale of growing up gay in the inner city, and his enthusiastic impersonations of his family members. From his sassy chain-smoking sister Averie to his salt-of-the-earth stepfather Clarence, Domingo's family is certainly a charismatic bunch. Domingo has brought them to life vividly, with gleefully cartoonish mimicry and witty writing. Although some of these family vignettes have a somewhat too saccharine feel, they are the show's unquestionable highlight. Director Tony Kelly has kept the pace fast and the staging varied. Scenic designer Rachel Hauck's crowded basement set feels a little underused and over-detailed, but Marcus Doehl's lighting amplifies the emotions of Domingo's tale considerably. special mention should be given to Tom Morse's expert sound design.

Talk Entertainment A+ 14; Newsday A+ 14; Backstage A 13; Talkin' Broadway A 13; AP A 13; Variety A 13; Lighting & Sound America A- 12; TheaterMania A- 12; The New York Times B+ 11; The Daily News B+ 11; Curtain Up B+ 11; TOTAL: 137/11 = 12.45 (A-)
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Thursday, September 24, 2009

The Confidence Man

GRADE: B+

Created and produced by Woodshed Collective on the U.S.C.G ship Lilac. (CLOSED)

Here's a great demonstration of why Critic-O-Meter exists: The New York Times' Wilborn Hampton hated this site-specific multi-narrative show, based loosely on Melville's novel and staged all over a decommissioned boat on the Hudson River, but his is a lonely dissent from a chorus of raves for the show's intricacy, cohesion, site-specificity, and enchantment. Seriously: Every other critic either loved or warmly admired this show. Now, don't get us wrong, some of our favorite critics are inveterate outliers and contrarians, and we don't begrudge them their opinions. But when the lone voice of dissent, positive or negative, happens to have the biggest megaphone in town, we think it's important to exert a little counterweight. The "paper of record," in other words, isn't the whole record.


Gothamist A+
(John Del Signore) 2009’s most exhilarating theatrical achievement...This enthralling production is the work of Woodshed Collective, a company that specializes in immersive, site-specific performance...Part of what makes the experience so thrilling is that you’re free to break away from the group and wander the ship without guidance, which, in my experience, afforded small, wondrous moments of intimacy, spied through portholes or within dainty staterooms. On more than one occasion, I was the talented actors’ only spectator. I also noticed a tabby cat pass by me on the stairs at just the right moment. Was it part of the show? Was I?...Most definitely a work of dazzling genius, a spellbinding feat of collective creativity...I am personally offering a full refund to any Gothamist reader who leaves the Lilac in any way unimpressed.

Time Out NY A
(Adam Feldman) Marvelously intricate and involving...The sheer ambition of the project is impressive in and of itself: Set aboard theLilac Steamship at Pier 40, The Confidence Man comprises at least a dozen of stories about charlatans and mountebanks, some of them adapted from Herman Melville’s novel of the same name...But The Confidence Man is much better than it needs to be for gimmickry’s sake alone. Paul Cohen’s script—which, when all the tracks are included, is some 330 pages long—bulges splendidly with clever frills and fillips, and touches on interesting questions of knowledge and faith....Here’s the capper: This entire unique theatrical adventure is being offered free of charge. Since the Woodshed folks are obviously pros at the con, you have to wonder: What’s their angle?

Nytheatre.com A
(Heather Lee Rogers) A fun and unique experience...There are several, fully developed storylines all happening simultaneously—each exploring the art, morality, and tragedy of the "con"...The ship is a chaos of activity. About six different groups of audience members criss-cross through scenes, up and down steep ladder-like stairs, up to the deck, down into the hull, and sometimes cramming into tiny rooms leaving barely enough space for the actors to perform...I enjoyed the pandemonium and was impressed by the elaborate timing and choreography that must have gone into building it.

Variety B+
(Sam Thielman) It's a good thing "The Confidence Man" is free -- it requires at least three viewings. Not because it's particularly obtuse or dense, but because there are three different, dovetailing strands of playlets in simultaneous motion aboard the good ship Lilac, a rusty old tub that sits at Pier 40 on the Hudson. Nominally inspired by Herman Melville's novel of colorful steamboat passengers, Paul Cohen's gratifyingly ambitious script manifests itself less as a single play than an impressively cohesive piece of installation art about swindling, literally buoyed by the verisimilitude of its maritime setting...The writing varies from bit to bit; many of the 31 performers seem to feel understandably less at ease spouting unconvincing "period" dialogue than running the more contempo lines. Cohen's ending, which puts a bow on the proceedings, is also a little problematic, mostly because of the show's diffuse, labor-intensive concept and execution. As a whole, "The Confidence Man" works well enough to make a pat ending feel redundant.

The New York Times F
(Wilborn Hampton) The novel is a beautifully written yet complex work that could be a precursor to Nabokov, Pynchon or Murakami. The muddle that is being presented aboard the Lilac, a onetime lighthouse tender now docked on the Hudson, was written by Paul Cohen and is said to be “inspired by” Melville’s novel. That’s perhaps the biggest swindle involved: tricking an audience into thinking it was going to see a staging of Melville’s great opus. For an hour and 45 minutes, the audience is free to wander about the Lilac and watch little vignettes taking place in cabins or on various decks. Many are based on puerile sexual innuendo. In one, for example, a young man and a woman sit at laptops in the ship’s computer room, typing out those ads for penile enhancement that clog so many spam filters. If any of it were funny, the exercise might pass as parody. Travesty, however, is the word that springs to mind...A cast of 31 is listed in the program, but there is no real acting involved in the skits. The performers more resemble those actors who entertain visitors at historic sites like Plymouth Plantation or Colonial Williamsburg.

Gothamist A+ 14; Time Out NY A 13; Nytheatre.com A 13; Variety B+ 11; The New York Times F+ 2; TOTAL: 53/5=10.6 (B+)
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The Provenance of Beauty

GRADE: A-

By Claudia Rankine. Directed by Melanie Joseph and Shawn Sides. The Foundry Theatre (performed on a bus through South Bronx). (CLOSED)

Critics willingly admit to not knowing much about the South Bronx before the "travelogue" The Provenance of Beauty, performed on a bus by Sarah Nina Hayon and on a recording through headphones by Raúl Castillo and Randy Danson. Their only complaint is that some of the passages become too verbose and preachy, but overall critics find the journey effective, thanks not only to the sounds in the bus, but outside as well (microphones outside the bus pick up sounds from the streets).


New York Post A+
(Frank Scheck) The enterprising Foundry Theatre has staged shows everywhere from an East Village coffee shop ("Etiquette") to private apartments ("Open House"), but it has outdone itself with "The Provenance of Beauty." Performed on a bus roaming the South Bronx, this unique and brilliantly conceived show is the hippest journey in town. It's theatrical tourism, with plenty of attitude. Created by artistic producer Melanie Joseph and poet Claudine Rankine (who also scripted), the piece presents an opinionated view of a place most theatergoers hardly know.

Backstage A
(Leonard Jacobs) As the bus crosses the Willis Avenue Bridge tying Spanish Harlem to the Bronx, recollections and reflections, performed live by Sarah Nina Hayon and on recording by Raúl Castillo and Randy Danson, provide color and light to a slice of Gotham that is rapidly gentrifying. As it continues, Rankine seems to be warning us. Don't forget, she seems to say, that as something physical is saved, something intangible is lost. The narrative also includes sightseeing information, but it's communicated saucily enough to underscore Rankine's point. There's a pretty Con Edison station "wrapped in its façade of a refurbished, restored, suburban condo." There's the vast and imposing American Banknote building, under renovation to become "the cultural and commercial hub of a revitalized Hunt's Point." There's the Vernon C. Bain Correctional Center, a foreboding floating jail in which visitors "pass through the stink emanating from the waste-treatment facility on the right and the Fulton Fish Market on the left." Abandoned streets and manufacturing spaces still abound, of course, but there are landscaped parks, thriving shops, and also the tale of La Lupe, the legendary Cuban-American singer who remains an emblem of feverish local pride.

Gothamist A
(John Del Signore) Along the way, Rankine's spellbinding text, recorded by two actors, reveals itself as the proud yet resentful voice of the Bronx itself, and draws provocative connections between past and present, potential and reality, borough and city, and—most affectingly—the exterior of the bus and the inside of the visitors' heads. These recorded voices are greatly enhanced by Geoff Abbas's exquisite sound design, which uses microphones on the exterior of the bus to make the sounds of the sidewalks incredibly intimate—a man sitting outside a construction site coughs, and you hear it through your headphones. Throughout the tour, spontaneous moments of street theater reveal themselves; a boy lobs a basketball to his friend over a shop awning, a tattered American flag is spotted through the bus skylight, neighbors glare at the gawkers in the bus. Near the journey's brilliant conclusion, as the bus pauses by an overly optimistic So Bro condo, Barbara Corcoran is derisively quoted, saying, "The South Bronx is the last housing frontier close to New York City." So if the Bronx voices speaking through headphones contain notes of bitterness, you really can't blame them; most of us visiting from "New York City" won't be back, only our sewage.

The New York Times A-
(Charles Isherwood) The narration is spoken in smooth, flowing tones by Raúl Castillo and Randy Danson on tape, and the affable Sarah Nina Hayon in person. Some passages are precious or arch, more empty verbiage than sense: “Ultimately the life of a place is placeless. It overflows. It waits for me to coincide with you in the same instant it waits for you to coincide with me. Now here we are despite our individual beginnings, our various islands of birth.” O.K., whatever. You can tune in and tune out at will... “The Provenance of Beauty” is directed by Ms. Joseph and Shawn Sides, but of traditional drama there is not much, save for a lovely moment near the end of the tour, in which an emissary from the insulated cocoon of the bus enters the life of the city on the other side of the windows. The action is mundane — just a matter of somebody’s stepping off a bus — but it takes on a strange, startling significance in the context of this elegant meditation on a pocket of the city you might never think of exploring with guidebook in hand. You’ve come to see with a new immediacy that the distance between two streets, two neighborhoods or two people, between a blighted past or a promising future, between fertility and waste, is as great or as small as we choose to make it.

Time Out NY B+
(Helen Shaw) Beauty is a provocative, layered work, with one serious weakness. Rankine’s text—full of pseudoprofound statements like “identity is time passing”—works best when it keeps to plain speaking. The performers occasionally lapse into the preachy, waltz-time swing of the poetry reader, and what has felt fresh begins to dry into staleness. But these moments pale before the larger project, which is nothing less than forcing audiences to desegregate their urban experience—if only for 90 minutes. The South Bronx has revitalized itself despite the rest of us (Hayon’s delivery reserves particular venom for quoting real-estate queen Barbara Corcoran, who has called SoBro a neighborhood “close to New York”), and director-cocreator Melanie Joseph shows us its accomplishments. The city as self-healing, vibrant and infinitely diverse? That’s a project we can all get on board with.

New Yorker B
(Unsigned) The perception-changing piece, created by Melanie Joseph and Claudia Rankine, dares us to find the slums and correctional centers beautiful, even as it turns socioeconomic difference into an uneasy spectator sport. Take a good look now, it tells us, because the borough is as ephemeral as theatre itself.

New York Post A+ 14; Backstage A 13; Gothamist A 13; The New York Times A- 12; TONY B+ 11; New Yorker B 10; TOTAL: 73/6 = 12.17 (A-)
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Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Lizzie Borden

GRADE: B+

By Steven Cheslik-DeMeyer, Tim Maner, and Alan Stevens Hewitt. Directed by Maner. At the Living Theater. (CLOSED)

Given Lizzie Borden's multi-decade development process, it must be quite gratifying for its slate of creators to have their work greeting by reviews ranging from appreciative to gushing. Critics cite the rockin' tunes, the badass costumes and Jenny Fellner's performance as key reasons for celebration, while also noting the heavy Spring Awakening influence and occasional weaknesses with the book.



Time Out New York A
(Diane Snyder) The initial incarnation of Lizzie Borden—a fetching, brawny rock musical with an all-female cast clad in both period and punk attire—took place nearly 20 years ago, long before Spring Awakening depicted 19th-century youths under the influence of modern-day music. But it’s impossible not to think of that breakthrough musical (seasoned with a sprinkling of Sweeney Todd) when listening to the show’s invigorating rock songs and smooth ballads by Steven Cheslik-DeMeyer, Alan Stevens Hewitt and Tim Maner, which blend punk, heavy metal and grunge...the really killer stuff is the captivating score and the soaring voices singing along with it.

ShowShowDown A
(Wendy Caster) Lizzie Borden (with book, lyrics, music, concept, direction, and musical direction by Steven Cheslik-DeMeyer, Tim Maner, and Alan Stevens Hewitt) beautifully combines a kick-ass score, strong lyrics, surprising humor, sweet sexiness, cheerful anachronisms, and an eerie atmosphere... Special notice must be paid to the superb Jenny Fellner as Lizzie. Fellner's transition from repressed to explosive is calibrated perfectly, and she performs with her heart, body, and soul--and with great intelligence.

Village Voice B
(Alexis Soloski) Despite lacking any did-she-or-didn't-she drama, Lizzie Borden does supply other excitements: It offers an incest motive for the crimes (expressed uncomfortably in song) and conjures a lesbian romance with neighbor and hostile trial witness Alice Russell (Marie-France Arcilla). It also features pleasantly outré make-up (Carrie Lynn Rohm) and costumes (Bobby Frederick Tilley II), including a red dress for Lizzie with a skirt slit gynecologically high. The narrative is overstated and the characterization broad (more a fault of director Maner than of the actors), but the punky songs and cast energies are agreeably amplified. Not bad for a hatchet job.

TheaterMania B
(Dan Bacalzo) The show attempts to provide a motivation for the 1892 double homicide -- of which the young Lizzie was acquitted -- and while not everything works, a strong score and powerhouse vocal performances inject the piece with a dynamic, infectious energy that glosses over some of the piece's flaws.

NYTimes B
(Neil Genzlinger) The show struggles to establish and maintain a tone — is it high camp, low parody, operatic drama, or what? — but the four women are deliciously watchable. And what other show in town can say that its high point is a song (“Why Are All These Heads Off?”) about decapitated pigeons?

Show Business Weekly B
(Marianne Moore) Ultimately, the production casts Borden as a kind of proto-feminist heroine, even a patron saint of imprisoned and abused women. While, rationally, we know that taking an axe to Daddy’s head is never the solution, we buy the notion that Borden’s actions were her only means of acting out against the inheritance laws that kept her dependent. Or maybe she was just a psycho. At a century’s remove, it doesn’t matter much. This is New York, and we like our murderesses radical, lesbian, and totally hot.

Backstage B
(Mitch Montgomery) Steven Cheslik-DeMeyer, Tim Maner, and Alan Stevens Hewitt's rock musical works the pop angle hard—perhaps too hard. Lizzie is sharply staged, no doubt due to its decades of development, but the musical has picked up some other baggage along the way. Though more-experimental versions premiered in the 1990s (which, in fairness, I did not see), this version seems content to hop on the "Spring Awakening" bandwagon.

TONY A 13; SSD A 13; VV B 10; NYT B 10; SBW B 10; TM B 10; BS B 10; TOTAL: 76 /7 = 10.86 (B+)
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