Thursday, June 24, 2010
Ideal - ly taken with a grain of salt
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If taken seriously - at face value, the play Ideal is heavy handed screed about the narcissistic worldview of self-important artists in an age when the average person is struggling to survive the depression. It is serious and a little dull. However, when Ideal is viewed as Ann Rand’s melodramatic and disdainful take on the Motion Picture Industry of the 1930s, it is a raucously funny black comedy. Particularly when you understand she herself was a failed screenwriter and supported herself for a while as an extra in Cecile B. DeMille extravaganzas.
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Before becoming pin-up girl for raging capitalists and tea-party conservatives the world over, Ann Rand was a frustrated screen writer, and her frustration rages throughout Ideal. The play concerns a famous European actress, Kay Gonda, who yearns to be more than a movie star (it is rather obvious nod towards Greta Garbo or early Marlene Dietrich type, but also can be seen as a reference to Ann Rand herself, a European refugee of Soviet Russia). The play opens in the office frantic studio boss, a maniac surrounded by bad PR flacks and bitter associates. The audience learns that his most famous star, Kay Gonda is on the lamb, running from a murder investigation. Miss Gonda’s secretary shows up to inform the audience that the actress came by the house sometime last night to take 6 fan letters from her desk.
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Why six, why so she can visit six people and participate in six vignettes, as any black and white picture fan would know. In these six vignettes, she shows up in the middle of a stereotypical Hollywood problems of the 1930s, disillusioned husband, tortured artist, and down on his luck playboy among them. Echoes of Barbara Stanwyck, Norma Shearer, William Warren and Marie Dressler scream out from the stage. But the author twists the familiar set ups into arbitrary bleakness and distain, “proving” that she is above the mediocrity of the current playwright.
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Ann Rand’s inflated opinion of herself, her dismissal of the petty bourgeoisie of Hollywood (after they ignored her), and her attempt to poison the artificial plots, all of these unintentional motives layer upon each other too thick to ignore. Ideal ultimately ends up being an homage to the very medium she is trying to disparage. It is hilarious, sometimes purposefully and often accidentally.
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As Kay Gonda, Jessie Barr stand outs in the cast. She captures the self-importance and bitterness of the role wonderfully. The author really doesn’t like this character, and Miss Barr has no problem dishing up a vapid, self-delusional character, while still imbibing her with charisma. The fact that the audience identifies with Kay Gonda is a tribute to Miss Barr.
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The other members of the cast play multiple roles. Unfortunately, as a rule, the cast members are too young to play these roles effectively. They do a fine job generally, but their youth often works against them. Three of the ensemble, (Kim Rosen, Andrew Young and Dan Pfau) succeed in overcoming this wonderfully, by ignoring the age issues and plunging headlong into the characters. Dan Pfau is especially effective in wearing his emotions like a worn out raincoat (sorry, the film noir references come hot and heavy after this show).
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Director Jenny Beth Synder does a good job of moving the show along and allowing the right attitude to each of the vignettes, but the real star here is Ann Rand at her self-important and world-weary best. If this sound like something you might like, hurry to 59E59, Ideal is a hoot.
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It is always a little disconcerting when one person seems to be enjoying a play more than everyone else in the audience. It is particularly disconcerting when that one person is yourself. And so, I felt like a bit fish out of water while thoroughly enjoying myself at Ideal, the New York première of Ann Rand’s 1934 play. But then again, I had the same reaction at the first Austin Powers, a box office dud, that only bloomed on home video release. Ideal won't get a home video release - so go see it now.
(tickets)
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IDEAL
The 59e59 Theatre, June 17 – July 3, 2010
Cast list: Liz Aldefer, Jessie Barr, Ted Caine, Bill Griffin, Sean Ireland, Lee Kasper, Emily Marrow, Cara Massey, Dan Pfau, Kim Rosen, Ariana Seigel, Carly Walsh and Andrew Young
Director: Jenny Beth Synder
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Rating: Well Worth The Money
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What works: The echos of 1930s movies and movie stars
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What doesn't work: Some actors are too young for the roles
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What you get to brag about to your friends: It's a newly produced play by Ann Rand - author of Atlas Shrugged - how often do you see that!
Saturday, June 19, 2010
Reflections of a Heart: A Painful Journey
While Reflections of a Heart is an important piece of theater, it is not a terribly satisfying play. Quite possibly true but none the less distracting, every white character in Reflections is evil, very evil, sadistically evil or, at best, incompetent. On the other side of the scale, every black character is deferential, kindly, or angelic – and treated with contempt by the white society. There is very little dramatic tension, just a slow expansion of pain and undeserved woe. The playwright, Christopher G. Roberts, attempts to mitigate this by the use of the ghost of one character. The ghost tries to guide the audience with a call to action, but it is only marginally successful in giving Reflections a hopeful message.
Reflections has some beautiful acting, particularly by Chanel Carrol, who plays the wife of Woodard, Rosie. She brings forth a three dimensional character, alternately hopeful, wary and despondent. She accomplishes this even though her character shows up rarely and out of expect timeline sequence, but when Rosie arrives you believe are witnessing an understandable response.
Christopher G. Roberts, wrote and directed this play. He also plays Isaac Woodard Jr. and he does an excellent job of anchoring the play within his character. As Woodard, the anger, frustration and strength shine through the performance.
Avery Pearson as a shell shocked mental patient brings a surprising warmth to the role of Erman. As an outsider who clearly doesn’t understand why this is happening, he (along with Rosie) is one of the few characters the audience can relate to. – but both show up too infrequently.
Assuming the 1951 story is true, Reflections of a Heart is so heartbreaking it is a little painful to watch. The audience follows the story of Isaac Woodard, Jr. through his hellish experience, but there is no other side, no hopeful redemption. By all means see this Reflections of a Heart, there is a lot to be admired – but few traces of joy.
Friday, June 18, 2010
Goof Ass Fun with Sister Myotis
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And make no mistake, Sister Myotis’s Bible Camp is a party for believers that will make most everyone want to join in the fun. The premise for this show is simple. Sister Myotis and her two true-believing assistants prepare the audience for what’s in store over the course of a week long female retreat. Sister Myotis’ religious affiliation is kept carefully blurred because the religion is only a ruse that allows Sister Myotis to lecture, warn and hector the audience about sin and sinful actions. Religion itself isn’t mocked; Sister Myotis could be Catholic, Jewish or Amish and the effect would be the same. Sister Myotis’ non-denominational Christianity is merely the mountain she chooses to descend from in order to bring the Truth, as she sees, it to the masses.
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And her truthful missives wander wide, from crafts, to sexual hints, to complaints about the men-folk, to warnings about thongs. Steve Swift as Sister Myotis aims broadly at easy targets both clichéd and new. With its folksy charm and gentle PG jokes, you would feel comfortable taking your Grandmother to this show (and with some jokes about Gunsmoke and Hee Haw, you are forgiven for thinking your Grandmother is the target audience).
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Steve Swift creates a lovable, bumbling taskmaster in Sister Myotis, already a phenomenon on youtube. Easily offended, but sure of herself, Sister Myotis is a fully rounded character, both emotionally and physically. As her devotees, Todd Berry and Jenny Odle Madden bring Sister Velma and Sister Ima to life. Given bits and pieces of business and song, these two make the most of their time in the limelight, but it is a position Sister Myotis is not comfortable giving up.
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As theater piece, the play goes on a little too long, and trim or two would make the evening tighter. Some of the jokes hit a little flat, but they come so fast, that another is bound to come by soon that will tickle your funny bone. Directed by Jerre Dye, there a nice amount of movement and flow in the proceedings, that keep the show from feeling like a session with a stand up comic. And some credit has to go to the outrageous costumes by Ashely Whitten Kopera and Kim Yeager. Sister Myotis Bible Camp is a high energy good time with everything southern but fried chicken.
(tickets)
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SISTER MYOTIS'S BIBLE CAMP
The Abingdon Theatre, June 11 – July 4, 2010
Cast list: Todd Berry, Jenny Odle Madden, Steve Swift
Director: Jerre Dye
*
Rating: Well Worth the Money
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What works: Sister Myotis - she is a hoot
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What doesn't work: COOCH (you'll see)
*
What you get to brag about to your friends: She's on You Tube and she is hilarious.
A Disappointing Voyage: When We Go Upon The Sea
Given the limitations of the piece, Conan McCarty does a great job of portraying George Bush. Mr. McCarty’s George W Bush is bitter and confused, yet never pathetic. When given more to do that act perplexed, Mr. McCarty gives a complex portrayal.
Peter Schmitz plays Piet the Dutch butler determined to provide the ex-President with any entertainment and relaxation the night before the trail begins. Mr. Schmitz gives a well restrained performance. The entire show takes a mean spirited twist when the ex-President starts drinking, drugging and vacillating between self-pity and anger in his discussions with Piet.
Kim Carson plays Anna-Louis, a stunning female “relaxation specialist”, which ex-president Bush is offered, no strings attached. The motivations of both Piet and Anna-Louise remain murky throughout, despite attempts at explanation to the audience and the ex-President. Piet seems motivated by fear by the end of the play, while Anna-Louise actions are not in sync with her motivations.
These three characters become more and more friendly as the evening progresses and the intoxicants flow. In the course of the evening the butler and ex-President Bush discuss European and American place in the wilds of the world. Here the audience expects, and is waiting for, a serious reflection on the actions of George Bush. Instead we get superficial ramblings from a bitter, drunk Nixonian reproduction, and the justifications of a frightened colonial apologist. There is no exchange of ideas or even serious attempt to understand what occurred during the Iraq war, and this undercuts the play. When We Go Upon The Sea veers into mean spirited wish fulfillment by mocking George W Bush instead of investigating why or what he did. It is a cathartic journey, but not particularly pleasant to anyone involved.
Thursday, June 17, 2010
Little Doc is an intense ride to Brooklyn of the 1970s
The bar is manned by Rickey’s father, Weasel and owned by Manny. Mannyis the top dog in this group of small time crooks and con, and it turns out Ric is into Mannyfor $50,000. To get information on what happened to the money and why Ric is acting jumpy, Manny turns to Angelo. Angelo is an old acquaintance of the Ricky and his friends, recently release from jail. It is Angelo’s arrival and his agenda that propels the four friends to face the consequences of their small time criminal lifestyle. From the moment Angelo arrives upstairs at the apartment, the piece is set, inexorably, on violent path to conclusion.
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Joanne Tucker as the Peggy and Tobias Segal as Billy are standouts in a very good cast. Both have been drawn into this group dynamic by an emotional and physical attraction to Ricky, and both have been badly served by that same attraction. Their responses couldn’t be more different. Ms. Tucker plays Peggy as forceful and strong. Mr. Segal’s Billy, by contrast, is pretty much silent and withdrawn falling deeper and deeper into a drug stupor. Steven Marcus is Weasel, and he is excellent as Ric’s father, a small time hoodlum overtaken by the twin demands of family and loyalty.
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But it is Adam Driver as Ric that shines the brightest in this cast, particularly in the last section of the show. He plans to get out of his dead end life, at the expense of his friends and family. When his plan is discovered, his failure as a friend and son is overshadowed by his own fear and the desire to escape the consequences of his actions.
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Director John Gould Rubin does a good job of keeping the action on a long slow boil, building tension and dread throughout the show, without wearing the audience out. He is supported by a set design (by David Rockwell) that keeps the action in the two venues tight and focused, switching seamlessly between the bar and apartment and giving the audience more information that the characters. This technique brings the audience into the piece, with full knowledge of the lies and desperation of the characters.
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Little Doc slowly strips away the veneer of invulnerability from Ric, a charming young man, with the soul of a punk and bully. It forces Ric to confront the consequences from his life choices, something everyone must do at some point.
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(tickets)
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LITTLE DOC
The Rattlestick Theatre, June 11 – July 18, 2010
Cast list: Adam Driver, Salvatore Inzerillo, Steve Marcus, Tobias Segal, Billy Tangradi, Dave Tawil and Joanne Tucker
*
Rating: Well Worth The Money
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What works: Intense moments of excellent acting and a slow burn
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What doesn't work: The story might be too remote for some
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What you get to brag about to your friends: The first play by a great film maker.
Wednesday, June 16, 2010
Go Now and See "Freed" at 59E59
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This play could easily have fallen into a lecture on Liberia or the rights of Free Black men in the slave era or any other didactic message about the 1820s. Instead, Freed uses the hope and aspirations of John to pull the audience into a narrative of the times. The Reverend Wilson befriends the young man and sponsors him at the University. When John is not able to live on campus, he stays with the Reverend and his wife. The wife provides a touchstone to the reality outside of the university walls.
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Christopher McCann as Reverend Wilson does a very good job of bringing the conflicted man to life. His teacher is well meaning, but can be condescending when trying to be supportive. His role eschews the easy generalizations of the time. But it is Sheldon Best as John Newton Templeton and Emma O’Donnell as the wife who steal this show. Miss O’Donnell burns up the stage with barely disguised anger towards the life she has. John is tangential target of her disappointment with the world and her place in it. But her anger doesn’t turn into self-pity and bitterness, it turns into a force of unflinching truth, bringing insights to the to the young man.
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In John Newton Templeton, Sheldon Best has found a character to give new voice of the freed black American. This man is smart and ambitious, albeit limited by his time and circumstances. He finds the antagonism of Mrs. Wilson uncomfortable and confusing.
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Without overly explaining the emotional journey of the show, it moved in unexpected ways and dealt with issues new to the audience. It avoided the banal and obvious arguments and instead forced both the characters and the audience to reevaluate preconceptions. Credit has to go to Charles Smith for bringing new stories out in Freed.
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Joe Brancato directed this show with a wonderfully light hand, trusting his actors and the audience to make the journey together. The very simple and organic set is enhanced by a great lighting design, scenic design done by Joseph J. Egan and lighting designer by Martin E. Vreeland. The lighting focuses the play on the individuals and just as the costumes set the era well, without being too overbearing.
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By all means see this show. Go with any preconceptions you have because this show and cast will blow past them.
(tickets)
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FREED
The 59E59 Theatres, June 11 – July 3, 2010
Cast list: Sheldon Best, Christopher McCann, Emma O’Donnell
*
Rating: SEE IT!
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What works: A surprising stories told by amazing actors.
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What doesn't work: A very short trip to the meodramtic side
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What you get to brag about to your friends: You will be talking about this amazing show that has a very limited run. Your friends will be very jealous if they miss it!
Monday, June 14, 2010
Lee Blessing's A Walk In The Woods Remembrance
Wednesday, June 9, 2010
Big Casting News On Broadway (and the Hamptons)
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To start, Sam Underwood (so good in Candida) and Alex Baldwin star in Equus in East Hampton. It should be a great show.
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A Little Night Music was worried that with the loss of Catherine Zeta Jones and Angela Landsbury there might be no excitement. But they have since since Bernadette Peters and Elaine Stritch! It should be great (news).
Tuesday, June 8, 2010
Wonderful Show! Naked In A Fishbowl
If you read this on a Monday night, then you have to wait another whole week to see one of the funniest shows around. Naked in a Fishbowl is a hilariously, spot on serialized look at the lives of 4 female friends and their circle of acquaintances (tickets). The June 7th show was these collaborators’ first back together as a group after performing this in 2005 – 2007 in various venues. But the audience doesn’t need to know any background at all, to step into the fun.
Let me start by saying that I really don’t like improv – as a rule. A pretty much a hard and fast rule at that. I know it is an art, but to me it is like Mime or Jackson Pollock, just because it is good, doesn’t mean I have to like it. But this show breaks every preconceived notion I have about improv and what it is and can do. This show is standup and cheer great.
Katherine Heller, Brenna Palughi, Lynne Rosenberg, Lauren Seikaly play longtime friends, one married with children, one divorced, one uncomfortable with new found, albeit minor, fame and one yoga instructing single woman. Together, they play off each other with an ease and seamlessness that must be rehearsed, but it is all done as improvisation. The audience would never know, except on the rare occasions that they crack each other up, but even these feel totally authentic as it would if you made friends laugh.
The show I saw on Monday concerned the four women getting ready and then attending a benefit event for planned parenthood. The interplay, the tardiness and annoyance, the question of outfits, it feels like you are spying on old very funny friends – who happen to be going through their own personal emotional issues.
Molly Knefel joined the cast as Alice, a younger cousin of Sara (Katharine Heller). There is some expository background to keep everyone up to speed, but it is given easily as if catching friends up on what gossip they missed out on. Two other women, D’Arcy Erokan and Daliya Karnofsky, are in the cast list and will probably join soon. If the ease in which the cast brought in Molly Knefel is any indication, it will be smooth introductions all around.
These women discussed age, child bearing, appropriate child bearing age, strappy shoes, sex, lesbian sex, ex-husbands and boyfriends, Sarah Palin, difficulties of motherhood, money issues, yoga as life force and the changing nature of friendships without dropping the ball anywhere along the way. There were no pat jokes waiting to be reeled off, just interactions that were hilariously funny and sometimes touching.
There is none of the give us a situation and give me a feeling that screams “improv” to many people, and has many of them running for the exits. Except for the minimal sets, this might be any play, or any play where the inmates take over the asylum.
All four women are amazing, giving full rounded characters and are gracious is yielding the floor and the laughs to each other. You get the feeling that even if there wasn’t a house full of constantly laughing, applauding people, these four actors might still get together every Monday night a 7PM, just to make each other laugh. Naked In A Fishbowl is wonderful.
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Naked In A Fishbowl
The SoHo Playhouse, June 7 – Summer Tickets
Cast list: Katherine Heller, Brenna Palughi, Lynne Rosenberg, Lauren Seikaly, Molly Knefel
Rating: See It
What works: These talented talented women
What doesn't work: nothing
What you get to brag about to your friends: There will be lines that you can quote for the next week