Stage Buzz Review by David Pasteelnick
Terrence McNally could be considered by some as the still-living patron saint of gay theater. While I imagine he would chafe at such a limiting honorific, the fact remains that his body of work contains many seminal works of modern gay theater – The Lisbon Traviata, Lips Together, Teeth Apart, Love! Valour! Compassion!, Corpus Christi, the book for the musical A Man of No Importance – and now he adds to that list with Some Men, performing at Second Stage Theatre through April 22.
A collection of interlinked vignettes, Some Men attempts to chart the different shapes that intimate male-male relationships have taken over various decades of the 20th Century and into the 21st. While by no means a perfect work, Some Men does serve as a theatrical weigh-station, noting where the gay community has been, where it is now and even to some extent where it may be heading.
The play is book-ended by a gay wedding taking place at the Waldorf-Astoria. Various generations of gay men, both coupled and single, arrive and offer observations on the proceedings. From this jumping off point, the action see-saws through time, providing snapshots of life in the ‘20s, ‘60s, ‘70s, etc. The problem with snapshots is that sometimes you don’t get a full idea of what is happening in the photo, or the emotion or message that the artist attempts to convey is not fully realized. This is the case in a few scenes such as one at a military funeral. More fully realized moments take place on a beach in the Hamptons, a restaurant dining room at the Waldorf, and my personal favorite – a bench in Central Park.
I had the good fortune to attend an earlier version of this work when it was performed at the Philadelphia Theatre Company last summer. The play has evolved considerably since then, and while I felt a few scenes lacked the punch they packed in the prior incarnation, the play holds together much better as a whole now. The cast is uniformly strong, with some standout moments by David Greenspan as a drag queen during the Stonewall riots, Michael McElroy as a Harlem Renaissance nightclub host, and Don Amendolia in a variety of scene stealing roles. Consideration must also be given to Kelly AuCoin and Romain Frugé whose moving portrayal of a couple at various stages of their relationship provides audiences with a crucial through-line that grounds the piece.
Director Trip Cullman, who has helmed several of my favorite Off-Broadway works, provides a sure hand to the proceedings, making a clear narrative out of what could have been a chaotic evening and keeping the pace brisk and engaging. He steers clear of mawkish sentimentality and never lets a joke hijack a scene. The simple (ornate chandeliers notwithstanding) and extremely flexible and functional set was designed by Mark Wendland. Linda Cho’s attractive and effective costumes play a vital part in keeping the proceedings coherent. Kevin Adam’s evocative and at times humorous lighting and John Gromada’s nostalgia-inducing sound design also do their part to make the overall evening extremely enjoyable.
Some Men may not be all men and it may not have reinvented gay theater, but it provides a brisk, effective, and at times moving tour of what it means and has meant for a man to love another man.
Written by Terrence McNally
Directed by Trip Cullman
Set Designer: Mark Wendland
Costume Designer: Linda Cho
Lighting Designer: Kevin Adams
Sound Designer: John Gromada
Assistant Set Designer: Rachel Nemec
Assistant Costume Designer: Terese Wadden
Assistant Sound Designer: Bridget O’Connor
Production Stage Manager: Lori Ann Zepp
Stage Manager: Stephanie Gratton
Featuring Don Amendolia, Kelly AuCoin, Romain Frugé, David Greenspan, Jesse Hooker, Michael McElroy, Pedro Pascal, Randy Redd, and Frederick Weller.
Second Stage Theatre
307 W. 43rd Street
Through April 22nd
Friday, April 20, 2007
Sunday, April 15, 2007
Review - Picasso at the Lapin Agile (T. Schreiber Studio)
Stage Buzz Review by Byrne Harrison
I’ve long been a fan of Steve Martin’s cute and quirky Picasso at the Lapin Agile, though until Friday, I had never seen it performed. What a delight to have my first staged version of the show not only live up to, but exceed, my expectations.
The bright and witty comedy, produced by the T. Schreiber Studio, imagines a chance encounter between Albert Einstein (Josh Marcantel) and Pablo Picasso (Richard Zekaria) in a small bar in Paris, the Lapin Agile. Both are on the cusp of revealing their own particular brand of genius; Einstein with his theory of relativity, and Picasso with Cubism. They are also on the cusp of a radical new century, one that they will come to symbolize.
The play deals with the nature of art, revelation, physics, wine, men, women, love, history . . . a myriad of concepts. Most interesting is its take on genius and fame, both as it relates to Picasso, Einstein and a time-traveling visitor (Edward Campbell, Jr.), who is never named, but is wearing blue suede shoes, and to Charles Dabernow Schmendiman (Michael Black), a nobody who is determined not to let history pass him by unnoticed.
The production is superb, especially in its technical values. George Allison’s highly detailed and realistic set transports the audience to turn of the century Paris. In fact, some of the audience sits onstage during the production, as patrons of the Lapin Agile. Lighting designer Andrea Boccanfuso recreates the intimate feel of a small Parisian bar, and has a couple of stunning visual effects at the end of the play. Karen Ann Ledger’s period costumes are marvelous and give added depth to the characters.
The eleven person ensemble is excellent, with special praise to Zekaria as the manic and sexy Spaniard; Marcantel, whose charmingly goofy Einstein was pleasure to watch; and Frank Mihelich and Maeve Yore as Freddy and Germaine, the down-to-earth owners of the Lapin Agile. Michael Black as Schmendiman provides some of the funniest moments of the show; he has excellent timing and a willingness to throw himself into the sublime ridiculousness of his role.
Director Cat Parker proves adept both at the over-the-top humor and the moments of quiet wonder that Martin has created in his play.
Congratulations to the cast, crew, and T. Schreiber Studio for an excellent production.
Written by Steve Martin
Directed by Cat Parker
Scenic Designer: George Allison
Costume Designer: Karen Ann Ledger
Lighting Designer: Andrea Boccanfuso
Sound Designer: Christopher Rummel
Rehearsal Stage Manager: Shane Van Vliet
Production Stage Manager: Melanie Bell
Assistant Director: Brittney Venable
Set Decorator: Carolyn Mraz
Assistant Costume Designer: Summer Lee Jack
Stitcher: Francesca Neville
Technical Director: Brian Smallwood
Assistant Technical Director: Joe Powell
Lighting Assistant: Rand Sherman
Lightin Assistant: Anna C. Jones
Production Photographer: Rod Goodman
Publicist: Katie Rosin
Industry Liaison: Jessica Faller
Featuring Frank Mihelich (Freddy), Jaim Aylward (Gaston), Maeve Yore (Germaine), Josh Marcantel (Albert Einstein), Arela Rivas (Suzanne), Todd Cowdery (Sagot), Richard Zekaria (Pablo Picasso), Michael Black (Charles Dabernow Schmendiman), Andrea Marie Smith (The Countess), Ivette Dumeng (Mimi the Admirer), and Edward Campbell, Jr. (A Visitor).
T. Schreiber Studio
151 W. 26th Street, 7th Floor
Through May 6th
I’ve long been a fan of Steve Martin’s cute and quirky Picasso at the Lapin Agile, though until Friday, I had never seen it performed. What a delight to have my first staged version of the show not only live up to, but exceed, my expectations.
The bright and witty comedy, produced by the T. Schreiber Studio, imagines a chance encounter between Albert Einstein (Josh Marcantel) and Pablo Picasso (Richard Zekaria) in a small bar in Paris, the Lapin Agile. Both are on the cusp of revealing their own particular brand of genius; Einstein with his theory of relativity, and Picasso with Cubism. They are also on the cusp of a radical new century, one that they will come to symbolize.
The play deals with the nature of art, revelation, physics, wine, men, women, love, history . . . a myriad of concepts. Most interesting is its take on genius and fame, both as it relates to Picasso, Einstein and a time-traveling visitor (Edward Campbell, Jr.), who is never named, but is wearing blue suede shoes, and to Charles Dabernow Schmendiman (Michael Black), a nobody who is determined not to let history pass him by unnoticed.
The production is superb, especially in its technical values. George Allison’s highly detailed and realistic set transports the audience to turn of the century Paris. In fact, some of the audience sits onstage during the production, as patrons of the Lapin Agile. Lighting designer Andrea Boccanfuso recreates the intimate feel of a small Parisian bar, and has a couple of stunning visual effects at the end of the play. Karen Ann Ledger’s period costumes are marvelous and give added depth to the characters.
The eleven person ensemble is excellent, with special praise to Zekaria as the manic and sexy Spaniard; Marcantel, whose charmingly goofy Einstein was pleasure to watch; and Frank Mihelich and Maeve Yore as Freddy and Germaine, the down-to-earth owners of the Lapin Agile. Michael Black as Schmendiman provides some of the funniest moments of the show; he has excellent timing and a willingness to throw himself into the sublime ridiculousness of his role.
Director Cat Parker proves adept both at the over-the-top humor and the moments of quiet wonder that Martin has created in his play.
Congratulations to the cast, crew, and T. Schreiber Studio for an excellent production.
Written by Steve Martin
Directed by Cat Parker
Scenic Designer: George Allison
Costume Designer: Karen Ann Ledger
Lighting Designer: Andrea Boccanfuso
Sound Designer: Christopher Rummel
Rehearsal Stage Manager: Shane Van Vliet
Production Stage Manager: Melanie Bell
Assistant Director: Brittney Venable
Set Decorator: Carolyn Mraz
Assistant Costume Designer: Summer Lee Jack
Stitcher: Francesca Neville
Technical Director: Brian Smallwood
Assistant Technical Director: Joe Powell
Lighting Assistant: Rand Sherman
Lightin Assistant: Anna C. Jones
Production Photographer: Rod Goodman
Publicist: Katie Rosin
Industry Liaison: Jessica Faller
Featuring Frank Mihelich (Freddy), Jaim Aylward (Gaston), Maeve Yore (Germaine), Josh Marcantel (Albert Einstein), Arela Rivas (Suzanne), Todd Cowdery (Sagot), Richard Zekaria (Pablo Picasso), Michael Black (Charles Dabernow Schmendiman), Andrea Marie Smith (The Countess), Ivette Dumeng (Mimi the Admirer), and Edward Campbell, Jr. (A Visitor).
T. Schreiber Studio
151 W. 26th Street, 7th Floor
Through May 6th
Thursday, April 5, 2007
Review - The Facts of Life: The Lost Episode
Stage Buzz Review by Byrne Harrison
You take the good. You take the bad. You take them both and there you have . . . Jamie Morris’s wildly absurd The Facts of Life: The Lost Episode. In this episode, entitled “The Best Little Whorehouse in Peekskill,” Mrs. Garrett and the girls are faced with the prospect of losing their dorm to development, the elimination of Mrs. Garrett’s job, and the Starbucks-driven closing of Edna’s Edibles unless they can come up with enough money to save the day. They do what any good boarding school girls would do . . . open a brothel.
Morris’s send up of this bewilderingly popular show (it ran nine seasons according to IMDB) hits all the expected marks – Tootie’s skates, Natalie’s constant grinning through her lines, Mrs. Garrett’s cries of “Girls! Girls!” It also stakes out some new territory – taking Jo and Blair’s love/hate relationship and accentuating the love portion. Woven in are some amusingly rewritten songs from The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas, some lines and images that would shock a sailor and will promptly get lodged in your brain forever, and a visit from Blair’s cousin Geri that led one audience member to loudly exclaim, “Oh no, they are NOT going there!”
Yes, they are. And it’s damn funny.
The five actors in the show all do a remarkable job of creatively parodying their TV characters. It is Brooks Braselman, who plays Natalie and several other minor characters, however, who steals the show. Not only is his Natalie spot on, but he is such a dynamo that he seems to vibrate with energy every time he’s on stage. Jamie Morris, playing a sex-crazed Mrs. Garrett, keeps up with him and always looks like he’s having the time of his life. In fact, that seems to be case with all the actors – they look like they’re having a blast.
The show is not without its slow moments, and there are a fair number of jokes that fall flatter than Mrs. Garrett’s flapjacks, but the laughs easily outnumber the groans. My suggestion is to get there a little early, grab a drink upstairs at the KGB Bar, and reminisce about some of your favorite episodes. Then grab a seat and try to keep up with the actors. Be prepared for a wild, raunchy, crazy time.
Written by Jamie Morris
Parody lyrics by Brooks Braselman and Jamie Morris
Directed by Christopher Kenney
Set Design by Michael Lee Scott
Musical Arrangements by Hank Bones
Featuring Brooks Braselman (Natalie), Christopher Kenney (Blair), Charlie Logan (Jo), Jamie Morris (Mrs. Garrett), and Jaquay Thomas (Tootie)
Kraine Theater
85 E. 4th Street
Closed
Tickets: www.theatermania.com or 212-352-3101
You take the good. You take the bad. You take them both and there you have . . . Jamie Morris’s wildly absurd The Facts of Life: The Lost Episode. In this episode, entitled “The Best Little Whorehouse in Peekskill,” Mrs. Garrett and the girls are faced with the prospect of losing their dorm to development, the elimination of Mrs. Garrett’s job, and the Starbucks-driven closing of Edna’s Edibles unless they can come up with enough money to save the day. They do what any good boarding school girls would do . . . open a brothel.
Morris’s send up of this bewilderingly popular show (it ran nine seasons according to IMDB) hits all the expected marks – Tootie’s skates, Natalie’s constant grinning through her lines, Mrs. Garrett’s cries of “Girls! Girls!” It also stakes out some new territory – taking Jo and Blair’s love/hate relationship and accentuating the love portion. Woven in are some amusingly rewritten songs from The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas, some lines and images that would shock a sailor and will promptly get lodged in your brain forever, and a visit from Blair’s cousin Geri that led one audience member to loudly exclaim, “Oh no, they are NOT going there!”
Yes, they are. And it’s damn funny.
The five actors in the show all do a remarkable job of creatively parodying their TV characters. It is Brooks Braselman, who plays Natalie and several other minor characters, however, who steals the show. Not only is his Natalie spot on, but he is such a dynamo that he seems to vibrate with energy every time he’s on stage. Jamie Morris, playing a sex-crazed Mrs. Garrett, keeps up with him and always looks like he’s having the time of his life. In fact, that seems to be case with all the actors – they look like they’re having a blast.
The show is not without its slow moments, and there are a fair number of jokes that fall flatter than Mrs. Garrett’s flapjacks, but the laughs easily outnumber the groans. My suggestion is to get there a little early, grab a drink upstairs at the KGB Bar, and reminisce about some of your favorite episodes. Then grab a seat and try to keep up with the actors. Be prepared for a wild, raunchy, crazy time.
Written by Jamie Morris
Parody lyrics by Brooks Braselman and Jamie Morris
Directed by Christopher Kenney
Set Design by Michael Lee Scott
Musical Arrangements by Hank Bones
Featuring Brooks Braselman (Natalie), Christopher Kenney (Blair), Charlie Logan (Jo), Jamie Morris (Mrs. Garrett), and Jaquay Thomas (Tootie)
Kraine Theater
85 E. 4th Street
Closed
Tickets: www.theatermania.com or 212-352-3101
Review - Tales of the Lost Formicans (Nicu’s Spoon)
Stage Buzz Review by Byrne Harrison
An alien, describing the culture of the Formicans (its name for late 20th century Americans), in Constance Congdon’s Tales of the Lost Formicans, refers to it as “complex, but strangely intangible.” This is also a perfect description of Congdon’s play. Dealing with aliens, Alzheimer’s, the disintegration of the family, middle-class apathy, and any number of other subjects, the play is hard to classify, and even harder to describe.
Luckily, Congdon’s play seems to be about taking away whatever message resonates most with each individual audience member. Don’t be surprised if you take away a completely different message than everyone else.
The main story concerns Cathy (Rebecca Challis), a woman whose husband has left her for a much younger woman. She leaves her life in New York and, son Eric (Nico Phillips) in tow, returns to Colorado to live with her parents, Evelyn (Celia Bressack) and Jim (Brian J. Coffey). Jim is in the early stages of Alzheimer’s and gets progressively worse over the course of the play. Dealing with her father, her perpetually angry teenage son, and the attentions of Jerry (Michael Hartney), the local conspiracy nut, proves to be almost more than she can handle.
And then there are the aliens.
Rather than writing a basic family drama, Congdon presents the audience with an anthropology lesson, as a group of aliens observe and attempt to understand the lives of this group of humans. They get most of it wrong, but of course, that’s the point. The results force us to view ourselves and our lives in a different light.
Nicu’s Spoon is an extraordinary company in that they celebrate the diversity of acting talent in the city by casting “multi-racial, multi-abled, multi-aged, and multi-gendered talent.” The cast of Formican’s certainly is true to that mission, and generally speaking, they are a diverse and talented group. Two actors in particular, Michael Hartney and Brian J. Coffey, are outstanding. Hartney, as the socially awkward Jerry, creates a character that is so sympathetic, it almost physically hurts every time he says or does the wrong thing. And watching Coffey’s Jim devolve from a robust foreman to a confused, shuffling old man is heartbreaking.
My main problem with the play, and sadly one which I couldn’t overcome, is that the world that Congdon was writing about in the late ‘80s doesn’t seem as relevant now. Congdon’s Formicans were on the verge of winning the Cold War. Though there was a Bush in the White House, they had yet to experience the first Gulf War. 9/11 wasn’t even something they could have conceived of. Their America, pre-cell phones and the Internet, seems almost quaint.
In an effort to overcome this, director Brett Maughan shifts the play to present day America and adds in references to Bush and Iraq. Unfortunately, this just makes it seem more out of place, or rather, out of time. Of course certain aspects of the show still resonate – dealing with Alzheimer’s, divorce, intergenerational family issues, etc. But it just doesn’t seem to be enough to make the show work as a whole.
While Nicu’s Spoon is certainly a company to watch, their upcoming production of Shakespeare’s Richard III might prove a better showcase for their talents and their unique mission.
Written by Constance Congdon
Directed by Brett Maughan
Stage Manager: Kathleen Conway
Lighting Designer: Steven Wolf
Lighting Design Intern: Stephen Halouvas
Prop & Scenic Designer: Brett Maughan & S. Barton-Farcas
AD/Production Assistant: Alvaro Sena
ASM/Production Intern: Chrissy Capobianco
Costume Designer: Thomas Cassetta
Build Crew Head: John Trevellini
Lights/Sound Running Crew: Kathleen Conway & Tom Cassetta
ASL Interpreters: Pamela O. Mitchell, Pat Dash, Gerald Small & Sharon Williams
Featuring Rebecca Challis (Cathy), Brian J. Coffey (Jim), Celia Bressack (Evelyn), Nico Phillips (Eric), Lindsay Goranson (Judy), Michael Hartney (Jerry), Jovinna Chan (Head Alien), Russell Waldman (Alien 2), Dirk Smile (Alien 3)
Theatre 54
244 W. 54th Street
Through April 15th
Wed.-Sun.: 8 pm
Tickets: www.smarttix.com
An alien, describing the culture of the Formicans (its name for late 20th century Americans), in Constance Congdon’s Tales of the Lost Formicans, refers to it as “complex, but strangely intangible.” This is also a perfect description of Congdon’s play. Dealing with aliens, Alzheimer’s, the disintegration of the family, middle-class apathy, and any number of other subjects, the play is hard to classify, and even harder to describe.
Luckily, Congdon’s play seems to be about taking away whatever message resonates most with each individual audience member. Don’t be surprised if you take away a completely different message than everyone else.
The main story concerns Cathy (Rebecca Challis), a woman whose husband has left her for a much younger woman. She leaves her life in New York and, son Eric (Nico Phillips) in tow, returns to Colorado to live with her parents, Evelyn (Celia Bressack) and Jim (Brian J. Coffey). Jim is in the early stages of Alzheimer’s and gets progressively worse over the course of the play. Dealing with her father, her perpetually angry teenage son, and the attentions of Jerry (Michael Hartney), the local conspiracy nut, proves to be almost more than she can handle.
And then there are the aliens.
Rather than writing a basic family drama, Congdon presents the audience with an anthropology lesson, as a group of aliens observe and attempt to understand the lives of this group of humans. They get most of it wrong, but of course, that’s the point. The results force us to view ourselves and our lives in a different light.
Nicu’s Spoon is an extraordinary company in that they celebrate the diversity of acting talent in the city by casting “multi-racial, multi-abled, multi-aged, and multi-gendered talent.” The cast of Formican’s certainly is true to that mission, and generally speaking, they are a diverse and talented group. Two actors in particular, Michael Hartney and Brian J. Coffey, are outstanding. Hartney, as the socially awkward Jerry, creates a character that is so sympathetic, it almost physically hurts every time he says or does the wrong thing. And watching Coffey’s Jim devolve from a robust foreman to a confused, shuffling old man is heartbreaking.
My main problem with the play, and sadly one which I couldn’t overcome, is that the world that Congdon was writing about in the late ‘80s doesn’t seem as relevant now. Congdon’s Formicans were on the verge of winning the Cold War. Though there was a Bush in the White House, they had yet to experience the first Gulf War. 9/11 wasn’t even something they could have conceived of. Their America, pre-cell phones and the Internet, seems almost quaint.
In an effort to overcome this, director Brett Maughan shifts the play to present day America and adds in references to Bush and Iraq. Unfortunately, this just makes it seem more out of place, or rather, out of time. Of course certain aspects of the show still resonate – dealing with Alzheimer’s, divorce, intergenerational family issues, etc. But it just doesn’t seem to be enough to make the show work as a whole.
While Nicu’s Spoon is certainly a company to watch, their upcoming production of Shakespeare’s Richard III might prove a better showcase for their talents and their unique mission.
Written by Constance Congdon
Directed by Brett Maughan
Stage Manager: Kathleen Conway
Lighting Designer: Steven Wolf
Lighting Design Intern: Stephen Halouvas
Prop & Scenic Designer: Brett Maughan & S. Barton-Farcas
AD/Production Assistant: Alvaro Sena
ASM/Production Intern: Chrissy Capobianco
Costume Designer: Thomas Cassetta
Build Crew Head: John Trevellini
Lights/Sound Running Crew: Kathleen Conway & Tom Cassetta
ASL Interpreters: Pamela O. Mitchell, Pat Dash, Gerald Small & Sharon Williams
Featuring Rebecca Challis (Cathy), Brian J. Coffey (Jim), Celia Bressack (Evelyn), Nico Phillips (Eric), Lindsay Goranson (Judy), Michael Hartney (Jerry), Jovinna Chan (Head Alien), Russell Waldman (Alien 2), Dirk Smile (Alien 3)
Theatre 54
244 W. 54th Street
Through April 15th
Wed.-Sun.: 8 pm
Tickets: www.smarttix.com
Monday, March 26, 2007
Review - Dream of a Common Language (3Graces Theater Company)
Stage Buzz Review by Byrne Harrison
3Graces Theater Company is committed to “exposing and exploring the power of women’s experiences through theater.” Not only have they chosen an excellent vehicle, Heather McDonald’s powerful Dream of a Common Language, but they have created an outstanding production.
Dream of a Common Language tells the story of husband and wife painters, Clovis (Annie McGovern) and Victor (Kerry Watterson). Both are Academy trained. Both are dedicated to their art. But only one is male, and in late-19th century Paris, that is all that matters. Clovis’s art is viewed as trivial, and indeed, so is she. Even Victor, who obviously loves and cherishes her, is blinded by his view of what constitutes ‘serious’ art. Things come to a head during a dinner party attended by several other artists, including the free-spirited Pola (Suzanne Barbetta) and the serious Marc (Ian Christiansen). When the women are banished to the garden so the men can plan their next show, Clovis is pushed to the edge. She stands up for her art and for herself, finally making Victor realize the frustration she is forced to live with every day at the hands of men like Marc and him.
The production is outstanding, from Mandy Hart’s wonderful sets to the music performed by musicians Chip Barrow and Zsaz Rutkowski, who remain onstage throughout the play. Director Karen Sommers lets the play build slowly, drawing the audience in, until they become engrossed in the story. She makes good use of Hart’s deep, multi-leveled set, and designer Anjeanette Stokes’ lighting to create beautiful stage pictures. And she is blessed with a wonderful cast.
McGovern’s Clovis is a remarkable woman, full of self-doubt and longing, but obviously talented, even if the world doesn’t recognize it. Watterson’s Victor is protective of his wife, yet dismissive, at times forgetting that she is flesh and blood and not an inanimate object to be painted. The two are marvelous together; their interaction in the moving final scene of the play is heartbreaking.
This was my first experience with 3Graces. Given the outstanding choice of material, the meticulous attention to the production values, and the superb acting, it will not be my last.
Written by Heather McDonald
Directed by Karen Sommers
Live Music by Chip Barrow and Zsaz Rutkowski
Original Music Composed by Chip Barrow and John D. Ivy
Set Design: Mandy Hart
Lighting Design: Anjeanette Stokes
Costume Design: Veneda Truesdale
Sound Design: John D. Ivy
Choreography: Dorothy Abrahams
Technical Director: Patrick T. Cecala II
Production Manager: Pamela D. Roberts
Assistant Stage Manager: Uys DeBoisson
Dramaturgs: Kathleen Bishop, Patrick T. Cecala II, Annie McGovern
Featuring Suzanne Barbetta (Pola), Ian Christiansen (Marc), Kelli Lynn Harrison (Dolores), David Kahn (Mylo), Annie McGovern (Clovis), Kerry Watterson (Victor)
Hudson Guild Theater
85 E. 4th Street
March 16-April 6
Mon., Thurs., Fri., Sat.: 8 pm
Sun.: 3 pm
Tickets: www.ticketcentral.com or 212-279-4200
3Graces Theater Company is committed to “exposing and exploring the power of women’s experiences through theater.” Not only have they chosen an excellent vehicle, Heather McDonald’s powerful Dream of a Common Language, but they have created an outstanding production.
Dream of a Common Language tells the story of husband and wife painters, Clovis (Annie McGovern) and Victor (Kerry Watterson). Both are Academy trained. Both are dedicated to their art. But only one is male, and in late-19th century Paris, that is all that matters. Clovis’s art is viewed as trivial, and indeed, so is she. Even Victor, who obviously loves and cherishes her, is blinded by his view of what constitutes ‘serious’ art. Things come to a head during a dinner party attended by several other artists, including the free-spirited Pola (Suzanne Barbetta) and the serious Marc (Ian Christiansen). When the women are banished to the garden so the men can plan their next show, Clovis is pushed to the edge. She stands up for her art and for herself, finally making Victor realize the frustration she is forced to live with every day at the hands of men like Marc and him.
The production is outstanding, from Mandy Hart’s wonderful sets to the music performed by musicians Chip Barrow and Zsaz Rutkowski, who remain onstage throughout the play. Director Karen Sommers lets the play build slowly, drawing the audience in, until they become engrossed in the story. She makes good use of Hart’s deep, multi-leveled set, and designer Anjeanette Stokes’ lighting to create beautiful stage pictures. And she is blessed with a wonderful cast.
McGovern’s Clovis is a remarkable woman, full of self-doubt and longing, but obviously talented, even if the world doesn’t recognize it. Watterson’s Victor is protective of his wife, yet dismissive, at times forgetting that she is flesh and blood and not an inanimate object to be painted. The two are marvelous together; their interaction in the moving final scene of the play is heartbreaking.
This was my first experience with 3Graces. Given the outstanding choice of material, the meticulous attention to the production values, and the superb acting, it will not be my last.
Written by Heather McDonald
Directed by Karen Sommers
Live Music by Chip Barrow and Zsaz Rutkowski
Original Music Composed by Chip Barrow and John D. Ivy
Set Design: Mandy Hart
Lighting Design: Anjeanette Stokes
Costume Design: Veneda Truesdale
Sound Design: John D. Ivy
Choreography: Dorothy Abrahams
Technical Director: Patrick T. Cecala II
Production Manager: Pamela D. Roberts
Assistant Stage Manager: Uys DeBoisson
Dramaturgs: Kathleen Bishop, Patrick T. Cecala II, Annie McGovern
Featuring Suzanne Barbetta (Pola), Ian Christiansen (Marc), Kelli Lynn Harrison (Dolores), David Kahn (Mylo), Annie McGovern (Clovis), Kerry Watterson (Victor)
Hudson Guild Theater
85 E. 4th Street
March 16-April 6
Mon., Thurs., Fri., Sat.: 8 pm
Sun.: 3 pm
Tickets: www.ticketcentral.com or 212-279-4200
Fundraiser - EAT Sings Sondheim
Eat Sings Sondheim - a benefit cabaret for Emerging Artists on Monday, March 26th, at 8 pm!
Directed by Tom Wojtunik
Come hear some of your favorite EAT members croon Sondheim like you’ve never heard it before.
Performers include:
Paul Adams
David Bishop
Amy Bizjak
Christopher Borg
Marc Castle
Laura Fois
Erin Hadley
Steve Hauck
Ryan Hilliard
Brian Louis Hoffman
Rebecca Hoodwin
Shannon Marie Kerr
Sebastian La Cause
Jenny Lee Mitchell
Maya Rosewood
Kristen Wilkins
Tickets are $20 at the door. Reservations can be e-mailed to EATTheatre@aol.com . It will be performed at Emerging Artists Theatre, 311 W. 43rd St., 5th Floor, between 8th and 9th Avenues, Monday March 26th at 8pm.
Directed by Tom Wojtunik
Come hear some of your favorite EAT members croon Sondheim like you’ve never heard it before.
Performers include:
Paul Adams
David Bishop
Amy Bizjak
Christopher Borg
Marc Castle
Laura Fois
Erin Hadley
Steve Hauck
Ryan Hilliard
Brian Louis Hoffman
Rebecca Hoodwin
Shannon Marie Kerr
Sebastian La Cause
Jenny Lee Mitchell
Maya Rosewood
Kristen Wilkins
Tickets are $20 at the door. Reservations can be e-mailed to EATTheatre@aol.com . It will be performed at Emerging Artists Theatre, 311 W. 43rd St., 5th Floor, between 8th and 9th Avenues, Monday March 26th at 8pm.
Saturday, March 17, 2007
Review - Five By Tenn (Turtle Shell Productions & the Terrapin Troupe in association with Off the Leash Productions)
Stage Buzz Review by Byrne Harrison
Given that Tennessee Williams is one of the best-known American playwrights, it’s unusual to see the words “New York premiere” attached to a production of any of his plays. But that’s exactly what Turtle Shell Productions has given us - an evening of Williams’ one-acts, featuring the New York premieres of Why Do You Smoke So Much, Lily? and Thank You, Kind Spirit. Although the plays, written by Williams from the ages of 23 to 33, are somewhat uneven, they hint at the greatness to come.
Director John W. Cooper uses one of the plays, Thank You, Kind Spirit, as a framing device for the other four pieces. In Kind Spirit a faith healer, Mother DuClos (Natalie E. Carter), leads a group of believers toward peace and healing, as long as they’re willing to pay. Throughout the play, Mother DuClos becomes aware of the other stories, as though psychically picking them up from the ether. When she does, the action in her play pauses, and the new play begins.
The first of these is the hallucinatory Talk to Me Like the Rain and Let Me Listen . . ., a play that drips with desire and frustration, like sweat on humid bayou night. The second and fourth plays, Hello From Bertha and The Lady of Larkspur Lotion deal with a familiar Williams’ theme – people at the end of their rope, brought low by alcohol and crushed dreams. The Lady of Larkspur Lotion is unusual in that it allows the two characters, Mrs. Hardwicke-Moore (Rebecca Street), an early version of Blanche DuBois, and her next-door neighbor, an alcoholic, unaccomplished Writer (Leon Fallon), to live happily in their delusions, if only for an evening. The third short play in the group is Why Do You Smoke So Much, Lily?. Featuring a passive-aggressive mother (Susan Capra) and a daughter (Christie Booker) who is reaching the edge of her sanity, it has hints of The Glass Menagerie and Suddenly Last Summer.
Each of the plays is well-acted, with standout performances given by Natalie E. Carter as Mother DuClos, Rebecca Street as Mrs. Hardwicke-Moore, and Leon Fallon as The Writer.
Production elements in Five by Tenn are especially strong. Set designer Ryan Scott has created a run-down, claustrophobic playing area, which nonetheless is versatile and roomy enough for each for the various plays, despite having the cast of Thank You, Kind Spirit stay onstage the entire time. Eric Larson’s lighting and Roman Battaglia’s sound design complement the set, creating the illusion of a run down apartment on a rainy night somewhere in the Vieux Carre.
While these five plays merely hint at the brilliance that was to come, any Tennessee Williams aficionado would do well to see Five by Tenn. Turtle Shell and Off the Leash are to be commended for bringing these diamonds in the rough to light.
Written by Tennessee Williams
Directed by John W. Cooper
Co-Produced by Jeremy Handelman
Stage Managed by TaShawn “Pope” Jackson
Dramaturge - Scott McCrea
Assistant Director - Patrick Mills
Scenic Designer - Ryan Scott
Lighting Designer - Eric Larson
Costume Designer - A. Christina Giannini
Sound Designer - Roman Battaglia
Dialect Coach - Karla Nielson
Featuring Emily Arrington (Little Girl), Kay Bailey (Bertha), Christie Booker (Lily), Susan Capra (Mrs. Yorke), Natalie E. Carter (Mother DuClos), Christina Christman (Lily/Girl), Jovanka Ciares (Lena), Elizabeth Clark (Woman/Girl), Nina Covalesky (Woman), T. Michael Culhane (Youth), Barbara Ann Davison (Mrs. Wire), Leon Fallon (The Writer), Chris Ford (Man), Joyce Feurring (Woman in Rear), Daniel Kipler (Man), Grace Manzo (Little Girl), Sylvia Mincewicz (Second Young Woman), Trish Montoya (Middle-Aged Woman), Margaret O’Connor (Goldie), Vincent Oppecker (The Writer), Candice Palladino (First Young Woman), Lennard Sillevis (Young Man), Rebecca Street (Mrs. Hardwicke-Moore)
The Turtle’s Shell Theater (in the Times Square Arts Center)
300 W. 43rd Street
Through March 25th
Mon., Wed.-Sat.: 8 pm
Sun: 3 pm
Given that Tennessee Williams is one of the best-known American playwrights, it’s unusual to see the words “New York premiere” attached to a production of any of his plays. But that’s exactly what Turtle Shell Productions has given us - an evening of Williams’ one-acts, featuring the New York premieres of Why Do You Smoke So Much, Lily? and Thank You, Kind Spirit. Although the plays, written by Williams from the ages of 23 to 33, are somewhat uneven, they hint at the greatness to come.
Director John W. Cooper uses one of the plays, Thank You, Kind Spirit, as a framing device for the other four pieces. In Kind Spirit a faith healer, Mother DuClos (Natalie E. Carter), leads a group of believers toward peace and healing, as long as they’re willing to pay. Throughout the play, Mother DuClos becomes aware of the other stories, as though psychically picking them up from the ether. When she does, the action in her play pauses, and the new play begins.
The first of these is the hallucinatory Talk to Me Like the Rain and Let Me Listen . . ., a play that drips with desire and frustration, like sweat on humid bayou night. The second and fourth plays, Hello From Bertha and The Lady of Larkspur Lotion deal with a familiar Williams’ theme – people at the end of their rope, brought low by alcohol and crushed dreams. The Lady of Larkspur Lotion is unusual in that it allows the two characters, Mrs. Hardwicke-Moore (Rebecca Street), an early version of Blanche DuBois, and her next-door neighbor, an alcoholic, unaccomplished Writer (Leon Fallon), to live happily in their delusions, if only for an evening. The third short play in the group is Why Do You Smoke So Much, Lily?. Featuring a passive-aggressive mother (Susan Capra) and a daughter (Christie Booker) who is reaching the edge of her sanity, it has hints of The Glass Menagerie and Suddenly Last Summer.
Each of the plays is well-acted, with standout performances given by Natalie E. Carter as Mother DuClos, Rebecca Street as Mrs. Hardwicke-Moore, and Leon Fallon as The Writer.
Production elements in Five by Tenn are especially strong. Set designer Ryan Scott has created a run-down, claustrophobic playing area, which nonetheless is versatile and roomy enough for each for the various plays, despite having the cast of Thank You, Kind Spirit stay onstage the entire time. Eric Larson’s lighting and Roman Battaglia’s sound design complement the set, creating the illusion of a run down apartment on a rainy night somewhere in the Vieux Carre.
While these five plays merely hint at the brilliance that was to come, any Tennessee Williams aficionado would do well to see Five by Tenn. Turtle Shell and Off the Leash are to be commended for bringing these diamonds in the rough to light.
Written by Tennessee Williams
Directed by John W. Cooper
Co-Produced by Jeremy Handelman
Stage Managed by TaShawn “Pope” Jackson
Dramaturge - Scott McCrea
Assistant Director - Patrick Mills
Scenic Designer - Ryan Scott
Lighting Designer - Eric Larson
Costume Designer - A. Christina Giannini
Sound Designer - Roman Battaglia
Dialect Coach - Karla Nielson
Featuring Emily Arrington (Little Girl), Kay Bailey (Bertha), Christie Booker (Lily), Susan Capra (Mrs. Yorke), Natalie E. Carter (Mother DuClos), Christina Christman (Lily/Girl), Jovanka Ciares (Lena), Elizabeth Clark (Woman/Girl), Nina Covalesky (Woman), T. Michael Culhane (Youth), Barbara Ann Davison (Mrs. Wire), Leon Fallon (The Writer), Chris Ford (Man), Joyce Feurring (Woman in Rear), Daniel Kipler (Man), Grace Manzo (Little Girl), Sylvia Mincewicz (Second Young Woman), Trish Montoya (Middle-Aged Woman), Margaret O’Connor (Goldie), Vincent Oppecker (The Writer), Candice Palladino (First Young Woman), Lennard Sillevis (Young Man), Rebecca Street (Mrs. Hardwicke-Moore)
The Turtle’s Shell Theater (in the Times Square Arts Center)
300 W. 43rd Street
Through March 25th
Mon., Wed.-Sat.: 8 pm
Sun: 3 pm
Monday, March 5, 2007
Review - The Girl Detective (The Ateh Theater Group)
Stage Buzz Review by Byrne Harrison
It’s risky adapting a surreal and lyrical short story for the stage. But then, it’s risky to write a story like that to begin with. In the case of the theatrical version of Kelly Link’s The Girl Detective, people will very likely praise or damn it based on their feelings about Link’s short story, because Bridgette Dunlap’s adaptation is extremely faithful to the text and style of the source. But love the story or hate it, you have to respect this production, ably presented by The Ateh Theater Group.
People looking for a traditional play probably won’t leave satisfied. The Girl Detective is non-linear. Certain scenes exist to set a mood or create an image; they don’t always move the story forward. And the plot, part hard-boiled detective novel, family drama, love story, fantasy, fairy tale, ballet, comedy . . . well, it’s often a little hard to follow. The main things to know: the Girl Detective is looking for her missing mother; she is being observed by a Guy in a tree, who is also the narrator of the tale; and there exists somewhere below us an Underworld where everything that’s lost ends up and where dancing is the primary language.
If you can set aside the need to be told a story or to have everything wrap up in a nice, understandable way and simply enjoy the experience, this is an amazing production.
To begin with, the Connelly Theater, unlike many Off-Off-Broadway spaces, features a huge, deep proscenium stage. Set designer Emily French makes great use of it by creating numerous levels and playing areas. The space also gives choreographer Whitney Stock plenty of room to display her rousing and athletic dance numbers.
The acting is superb. Kathryn Ekblad, a tall, striking actor, powerfully creates the extraordinary Girl Detective. Ben Wood as Guy, the young man who is basically stalking her, creates a character that is sweet and naĂŻve, rather than creepy. While Ekblad and Wood can be considered the leads of this show, everyone receives at least a few moments to shine. Particularly notable are Danielle Thorpe, as the Girl Detective’s mother, John Long, as the Tall Man, and Elizabeth Neptune, as a television Reporter. In addition to being excellent actors, the cast knows how to move. Stock’s choreography is a pleasure to watch, which is in no small part due to their skill and the sheer exuberance with which they approach it.
Director Bridgette Dunlap keeps the play moving quickly, much like the music that runs through it. In addition she’s added interesting little flourishes – a dumbshow at the beginning that previews some of the play’s important moments, mimed gondolas to take people across the river to the Underworld, instead of the more prosaic canoes from Link’s story. Small things, but they add a great deal to the show.
You may leave The Girl Detective not quite sure of what you just saw or what you were meant to take away from it. But if you can let go enough to savor the experience of the show, you’ll enjoy it.
Adapted and Directed by Bridgette Dunlap
From the story by Kelly Link
Choreography by Whitney Stock
Featuring Ben Wood as Guy, Kathryn Ekblad as The Girl Detective/Ensemble, Charley Layton as Father/Ensemble, Madeleine Maby as Housekeeper/Ensemble, Elizabeth Neptune as Reporter/Ensemble, Danielle Thorpe as Mother/Ensemble, Sara Montgomery as Expert/Ensemble, John Long as Ned/Ensemble, Marie Weller as Waitress/Ensemble, Time Eliot as Husband/Ensemble, Alexis Grausz as Birthday/Ensemble.
Connelly Theater
220 East 4th Street
Through March 17
Thurs.-Sun.: 8 pm
Tickets: 212-352-3101
It’s risky adapting a surreal and lyrical short story for the stage. But then, it’s risky to write a story like that to begin with. In the case of the theatrical version of Kelly Link’s The Girl Detective, people will very likely praise or damn it based on their feelings about Link’s short story, because Bridgette Dunlap’s adaptation is extremely faithful to the text and style of the source. But love the story or hate it, you have to respect this production, ably presented by The Ateh Theater Group.
People looking for a traditional play probably won’t leave satisfied. The Girl Detective is non-linear. Certain scenes exist to set a mood or create an image; they don’t always move the story forward. And the plot, part hard-boiled detective novel, family drama, love story, fantasy, fairy tale, ballet, comedy . . . well, it’s often a little hard to follow. The main things to know: the Girl Detective is looking for her missing mother; she is being observed by a Guy in a tree, who is also the narrator of the tale; and there exists somewhere below us an Underworld where everything that’s lost ends up and where dancing is the primary language.
If you can set aside the need to be told a story or to have everything wrap up in a nice, understandable way and simply enjoy the experience, this is an amazing production.
To begin with, the Connelly Theater, unlike many Off-Off-Broadway spaces, features a huge, deep proscenium stage. Set designer Emily French makes great use of it by creating numerous levels and playing areas. The space also gives choreographer Whitney Stock plenty of room to display her rousing and athletic dance numbers.
The acting is superb. Kathryn Ekblad, a tall, striking actor, powerfully creates the extraordinary Girl Detective. Ben Wood as Guy, the young man who is basically stalking her, creates a character that is sweet and naĂŻve, rather than creepy. While Ekblad and Wood can be considered the leads of this show, everyone receives at least a few moments to shine. Particularly notable are Danielle Thorpe, as the Girl Detective’s mother, John Long, as the Tall Man, and Elizabeth Neptune, as a television Reporter. In addition to being excellent actors, the cast knows how to move. Stock’s choreography is a pleasure to watch, which is in no small part due to their skill and the sheer exuberance with which they approach it.
Director Bridgette Dunlap keeps the play moving quickly, much like the music that runs through it. In addition she’s added interesting little flourishes – a dumbshow at the beginning that previews some of the play’s important moments, mimed gondolas to take people across the river to the Underworld, instead of the more prosaic canoes from Link’s story. Small things, but they add a great deal to the show.
You may leave The Girl Detective not quite sure of what you just saw or what you were meant to take away from it. But if you can let go enough to savor the experience of the show, you’ll enjoy it.
Adapted and Directed by Bridgette Dunlap
From the story by Kelly Link
Choreography by Whitney Stock
Featuring Ben Wood as Guy, Kathryn Ekblad as The Girl Detective/Ensemble, Charley Layton as Father/Ensemble, Madeleine Maby as Housekeeper/Ensemble, Elizabeth Neptune as Reporter/Ensemble, Danielle Thorpe as Mother/Ensemble, Sara Montgomery as Expert/Ensemble, John Long as Ned/Ensemble, Marie Weller as Waitress/Ensemble, Time Eliot as Husband/Ensemble, Alexis Grausz as Birthday/Ensemble.
Connelly Theater
220 East 4th Street
Through March 17
Thurs.-Sun.: 8 pm
Tickets: 212-352-3101
Friday, February 16, 2007
Fundraiser - Just Say Nosedive
Nosedive Productions presents:
“Just Say Nosedive!”
Their Annual Peer Outreach Debauchery Fundraiser Show
Featuring Comedy, Music, Drinking and Can-Do Attitude
Saturday, February 24 at the EAT Studio Space on 311 West 43rd Street, 5th Floor (between 8th and 9th avenues)
Doors open at 10 p.m., show starts around 11 or so.
$20 at the door, all you can drink
Money for this fundraiser goes to their spring show, Suburban Peepshow.
“Just Say Nosedive!”
Their Annual Peer Outreach Debauchery Fundraiser Show
Featuring Comedy, Music, Drinking and Can-Do Attitude
Saturday, February 24 at the EAT Studio Space on 311 West 43rd Street, 5th Floor (between 8th and 9th avenues)
Doors open at 10 p.m., show starts around 11 or so.
$20 at the door, all you can drink
Money for this fundraiser goes to their spring show, Suburban Peepshow.
Thursday, February 15, 2007
Fundraiser - “My First Time” Benefit
CW 11 NEWS AND CENTER STAGE JOIN MY FIRST TIME BENEFIT
SUSAN BLACKWELL HEATH CALVERT RICK CROM JEFFRY DENMAN
ED DIXON HUNTER FOSTER STEPHANIE KURTZUBA
MEGAN REINKING AND ASA SOMERS
JOIN
HUNTER BELL MATTHEW CAVENAUGH ANITA GILLETTE
TERRI KLAUSNER GARRETT LONG MARY TESTA AND JOHN TARTAGLIA
“MY FIRST TIME” An All-Star Concert To Benefit Quality Services for the Autistic Community (QSAC)
Directed by
IGOR GOLDIN
Musical Direction by
DAVID ANDREWS ROGERS
ONE NIGHT ONLY!
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 26 AT NEW WORLD STAGES
TICKETS ON SALE NOW
On Monday, February 26, producers Derek Collard and Gary Maffei are pleased to present “MY FIRST TIME,” an all-star Broadway concert to benefit Quality Services for the Autistic Community (QSAC). Directed by Igor Goldin (”A Ritual of Faith”) with musical direction by David Andrews Rogers, “MY FIRST TIME” will take place at New World Stages (340 West 50th St.) at 7 p.m.
Featuring performances by
Hunter Bell [title of show]
Susan Blackwell - [title of show]
Heath Calvert (Good Vibrations, The Children)
Matt Cavenaugh (Urban Cowboy, Grey Gardens)
Rick Crom (Urinetown, Footloose, The Goodbye Girl)
Jeffry Denman (The Producers, White Christmas)
Ed Dixon (Les Miserables, Under the Bridge)
Hunter Foster (Urinetown, Little Shop Of Horrors, The Producers)
Anita Gillette (Moonstruck, Carnival, Cabaret)
Terri Klausner (Evita, Sophisticated Ladies)
Stephanie Kurtzuba (The Boy From Oz, Mary Poppins)
Garrett Long (The Spitfire Grill, Seussical)
Megan Reinking - (Lestat, Dracula)
Asa Somers (Grey Gardens, Taboo)
John Tartaglia (Avenue Q, Beauty and the Beast)
Mary Testa (On The Town, 42nd Street, Regrets Only)
The Concert will be opened by CW 11 News at 10 Anchor Jim Watkins and closed by students from Center Stage Players from the Center Stage Theatre Company in Westport, CT singing Seasons of Change from RENT joined by a possible surprise guest.
The concert features a variety of first-hand stories and songs from the performers’ own “first” experiences, such as the first show they were in, their first professional stage success or the first show or star that inspired them to follow their hearts to Broadway. Additional performers will be announced soon.
Director Igor Goldin received the 2006 Award for Excellence in Direction for his work on Common Grounds in the 2006 New York Musical Theatre Festival. Previously with NYMF he directed Joseph and David Zellnik’s World War II musical Yank! His Off-Broadway credits include the critically acclaimed New York premieres of A Ritual of Faith”(The Lion Theatre) and the musical The Snow Queen (The Triad).
Tickets for this one-night-only event can be reserved by calling QSAC directly at 212-244-5560 ext. 2035. Tickets are priced at $25, $45 and $65.
For further information on “MY FIRST TIME” and QSAC, please contact Derek Collard at derektravis@mac.com or visit http://benefit.qsac.com/.
Saturday, February 10, 2007
Fundraiser - Love ‘n Courage Benefit
ELAINE STRITCH AND CHARLES BUSCH HEADLINE
“LOVE ‘N COURAGE”
4TH ANNUAL BENEFIT FOR THEATER FOR THE NEW CITY’S
EMERGING PLAYWRIGHTS PROGRAM
ONE NIGHT ONLY - FEBRUARY 12
ONE NIGHT ONLY - FEBRUARY 12
AT THE NATIONAL ARTS CLUB (15 GRAMERCY PARK SOUTH)
ALSO SCHEDULED TO APPEAR:
TAMMY GRIMES, ELI WALLACH, ANNE JACKSON AND BEN HARBURG
PLUS SELECTED SCENES FROM NEW WORKS INCLUDING “NUTCRACKER: RATED R,” AND THE NEW MUSICAL
“THE FURTHER ADVENTURES OF UNCLE WIGGILY: THE WINDBLOWN VISITORS”
AND MUCH MORE!
“‘Love and courage’ are what a playwright needs to thrive in this field, and ‘love and encourage’ is what Theater for the New City does!” - Crystal Field, Theatre for the New City Executive Artistic Director
Theater for the New City presents LOVE ‘N COURAGE, the 4th annual benefit for Theater for the New City’s Emerging Playwrights Program, it has been announced by Crystal Field, Executive Artistic Director of Theater for the New City. Hosted by playwright and actor Charles Busch, and featuring Elaine Stritch, this year’s benefit takes place at the beautiful National Arts Club (15 Gramercy Park South), on Monday, February 12, with cocktails beginning at 6:30pm, followed by dinner and performances.
Emcee Charles Busch, writer and star of such plays as THE LADY IN QUESTION, RED SCARE ON SUNSET and VAMPIRE LESBIANS OF SODOM and author of the Tony Award-nominated play THE TALE OF THE ALLERGIST’S WIFE, will host and sing.
Legendary Tony Award-winner Elaine Stritch will read a selection from a new play. Ms. Stritch is best-known for originating roles on Broadway in COMPANY, SAIL AWAY, GOLDILOCKS, and her Tony Award-winning solo play with music, ELAINE STRITCH AT LIBERTY.
Celebrated actors Tammy Grimes, Eli Wallach and Anne Jackson are also scheduled to appear. Ben Harburg will perform the songs of his grandfather, legendary composer Yip Harburg (FINIAN’S RAINBOW, BLOOMER GIRL, and “The Wizard of Oz”).
Selected scenes from Theater for the New City’s current season will showcase the works of recently discovered artists, including the sexy ballet company The Love Show, who will perform an excerpt from their show NUTCRACKER: RATED R. The evening will also feature scenes from Laurel Hessing’s new musical THE FURTHER ADVENTURES OF UNCLE WIGGILY: THE WINDBLOWN VISITORS with music by Arthur Abrams. LOVE ‘N COURAGE concludes with an open-mic piano bar and sing-a-long accompanied by Mr. Abrams.
Celebrating its 35th year, Theatre for the New City is a long-running bastion for new theatrical works. Often, talented emerging playwrights find themselves competing for funding with more established writers; Theater for the New City’s mission is to offer “love and encouragement” to these struggling artists with its Emerging Playwrights Program, established in 1971. O. Aldon James Jr., head of The National Arts Club, has taken an interest in Theater for the New City’s mission, and the organizations are working together to present this year’s incarnation of LOVE ‘N COURAGE.
“Emerging playwrights are writers of great promise who have yet to fulfill their artistic goals, but whose visions are high,” explains Ms. Field, whose Emerging Playwrights Program takes in fledgling and untried writers, offering a nurturing environment where new authors can flourish, and often realize their first fully produced work at Theater for the New City.
The Emerging Playwrights Program represents 60 percent of the nearly 40 new plays produced annually by Theater for the New City, giving playwrights a professional forum in which to experiment and develop as theater artists, and introducing fresh ideas and energy into the mainstream of American playwriting.
Through the Emerging Playwrights Program, up-and-coming writers meet and have access to experienced designers, directors and performers. The emerging playwright is surrounded by dedicated professionals in an atmosphere of high standards and supportive collaboration. Theater for the New City has an open-door policy towards new work — considering plays of any style, genre and political thrust — and reading every script submitted. The company also produces and commissions plays by some of the better-known American playwrights such as Maria Irene Fornes, Rosalyn Drexler, Sam Shepard, Ronald Tavel, Amlin Gray and Harry Kondoleon.
LOVE ‘N COURAGE is chaired by Betsy von Furstenberg, and the benefit committee includes F. Murray Abraham, Frank Biancamano, Jean Buchalter Vinie Burrows, Charles Busch, Martha Coigney, Myrna Duarte, Rina Elisha, Crystal Field, Assembly Member Deborah Glick, Tammy Grimes, Phillip Hackett, Dina & Ernie Harburg, Kitty Carlisle Hart, Judd Hirsch, Anne Jackson, Uke Jackson, O. Aldon James, Joyce & Seward Johnson, Robert & Celia Kornfeld, Romulus Linney, Eduardo Machado, Councilmember Rosie Mendez, Alberto Minero, Grace Paley, John Roberts, Tim Robbins, Gerald Rupp, Marian Seldes, Elaine Stritch, Jerry Tallmer, Mary Tierney, Jean-Claude Van Itallie, Glyn Vincent, Eli Wallach, and Jonathan Weber.
LOVE ‘N COURAGE, the 4th annual benefit for Theater for the New City’s Emerging Playwrights Program will be held at The National Arts Club (15 Gramercy Park South) on Monday, February 12; Cocktails begin at 6:30pm; dinner at 7:00pm, followed by performances at 8:00pm.
Tickets are $125. For reservations and additional information, please call 212-254-1109.
Monday, February 5, 2007
Interview with Chris Hampton of the WYSIWYG Talent Show
Stage Buzz Interview by Byrne Harrison
Chris Hampton is a blogger and co-creator of the WYSIWYG Talent Show, “a monthly showcase for the oft-overlooked genius of bloggers in or visiting New York City,” which kicks off its fourth season on Valentine’s Day, February 14th, at the Bowery Poetry Club.
BH: Since there are probably quite a few people out there who have no idea what the WYSIWYG Talent Show is, can you tell them how it all came to be?
CH: We’re an all-blogger reading/performance series and we do monthly shows at Bowery Poetry Club. We did our first show in February of ‘04. Andy Horwitz and I were at a party, swapping Valentine’s Day stories, which led to a couple of bad-sex-on-Valentine’s-Day stories, and we got to talking about how everyone has at least one bad sex story, and we started thinking it would make for a really funny show. So we decided to try it, and being bloggers ourselves we thought having all the performers be bloggers would be an interesting angle. The first show was such a big success that we decided to make it a monthly thing. It’s not about bad sex every time — it’s about all kinds of stuff — but we still do that every year as an anti-Valentine’s Day event because it’s just too much fun not to.
BH: So this month’s performance is your anti-Valentine’s Day show, ‘Worst. Sex. Ever. IV.’ Along with the annual gay pride show, this one always sells out. What can a first-time WYSIWYG audience member expect?
CH: Cocktails, lots of laughter and schadenfreude! Your own sex life will suddenly seem SO great by comparison.
BH: You’ve performed in several of the ‘Worst. Sex. Ever.’ shows. What dirty laundry have you aired in the past?
CH: At our very first show I told the story of how a past girlfriend once tried to surprise me with a sexy evening. Except she worked at this group home for developmentally disabled men, so she ended up sneaking me in there for the whole thing. Not very easy to get your groove on when there’s a guy pounding on the door yelling about how he pooped his pants.
BH: Unless that’s your thing, I guess, but let’s not go there. Can you give us a hint about what you’ll be doing for this year’s show?
CH: This year I’m going to be doing a roundup of all the bad sex I managed to have in 2006. I think I might do a PowerPoint presentation.
BH: Going back to the themes for a moment, WYSIWYG has covered everything from bad roommates to lousy jobs to high school trauma. Any topics that are especially near and dear to you?
CH: The bad roommates one was awesome, in part because of what I think may be my favorite line ever at a WYSIWYG show. One of the perfomers told us all about how his hellish roommate was once in the next room with a guest and he heard, through the wall: “Make a mess for daddy!”
Maybe you had to be there.
BH: Actually, I was. That image was seared into my brain.
CH: I have to say, though, that my favorites are the annual “Worst. Sex. Ever.” and “Extremely Gay Gayness” show. They’re just always hilarious.
BH: Now that WYSIWYG is entering its fourth year, I imagine you’ve seen a lot of talented people perform. Do you have any particular favorites?
CH: Hmm. Maybe Susie Felber’s story from a show about summer camp experiences. Her mother was one of those touchy-feely moms who think ALL children are special — so she innocently and cluelessly signed Susie up for a camp for “special” children. But it’s REALLY hard to pick just one!
BH: Fair enough. What do you think it takes to be a good WYSIWYG performer?
CH: I think you just have to have an interesting story to tell and an ability to put it out there in your own voice.
BH: Not always an easy task, I imagine. If someone wants to take the plunge and perform at WYSIWYG, what do they need to do?
CH: They have to have a blog, since that’s our whole schtick, and they can just visit our website and they’ll find all sorts of info about the show, including upcoming dates and contact information.
BH: What’s planned for the rest of the year?
CH: We’re experimenting with not doing themes each month. I’ve had a lot of people who would be great for the show but didn’t have stories or material that matched any of the upcoming themes, so we’re opening it up and making it something of a free-for-all. So far it’s been really fun!
WYSIWYG Talent Show: “Worst. Sex. Ever. IV.”
Wednesday, February 14th
8 p.m. (Doors open at 7:30)
Bowery Poetry Club
308 Bowery at Bleecker
For advance tickets, click here.
Chris Hampton is a blogger and co-creator of the WYSIWYG Talent Show, “a monthly showcase for the oft-overlooked genius of bloggers in or visiting New York City,” which kicks off its fourth season on Valentine’s Day, February 14th, at the Bowery Poetry Club.
BH: Since there are probably quite a few people out there who have no idea what the WYSIWYG Talent Show is, can you tell them how it all came to be?
CH: We’re an all-blogger reading/performance series and we do monthly shows at Bowery Poetry Club. We did our first show in February of ‘04. Andy Horwitz and I were at a party, swapping Valentine’s Day stories, which led to a couple of bad-sex-on-Valentine’s-Day stories, and we got to talking about how everyone has at least one bad sex story, and we started thinking it would make for a really funny show. So we decided to try it, and being bloggers ourselves we thought having all the performers be bloggers would be an interesting angle. The first show was such a big success that we decided to make it a monthly thing. It’s not about bad sex every time — it’s about all kinds of stuff — but we still do that every year as an anti-Valentine’s Day event because it’s just too much fun not to.
BH: So this month’s performance is your anti-Valentine’s Day show, ‘Worst. Sex. Ever. IV.’ Along with the annual gay pride show, this one always sells out. What can a first-time WYSIWYG audience member expect?
CH: Cocktails, lots of laughter and schadenfreude! Your own sex life will suddenly seem SO great by comparison.
BH: You’ve performed in several of the ‘Worst. Sex. Ever.’ shows. What dirty laundry have you aired in the past?
CH: At our very first show I told the story of how a past girlfriend once tried to surprise me with a sexy evening. Except she worked at this group home for developmentally disabled men, so she ended up sneaking me in there for the whole thing. Not very easy to get your groove on when there’s a guy pounding on the door yelling about how he pooped his pants.
BH: Unless that’s your thing, I guess, but let’s not go there. Can you give us a hint about what you’ll be doing for this year’s show?
CH: This year I’m going to be doing a roundup of all the bad sex I managed to have in 2006. I think I might do a PowerPoint presentation.
BH: Going back to the themes for a moment, WYSIWYG has covered everything from bad roommates to lousy jobs to high school trauma. Any topics that are especially near and dear to you?
CH: The bad roommates one was awesome, in part because of what I think may be my favorite line ever at a WYSIWYG show. One of the perfomers told us all about how his hellish roommate was once in the next room with a guest and he heard, through the wall: “Make a mess for daddy!”
Maybe you had to be there.
BH: Actually, I was. That image was seared into my brain.
CH: I have to say, though, that my favorites are the annual “Worst. Sex. Ever.” and “Extremely Gay Gayness” show. They’re just always hilarious.
BH: Now that WYSIWYG is entering its fourth year, I imagine you’ve seen a lot of talented people perform. Do you have any particular favorites?
CH: Hmm. Maybe Susie Felber’s story from a show about summer camp experiences. Her mother was one of those touchy-feely moms who think ALL children are special — so she innocently and cluelessly signed Susie up for a camp for “special” children. But it’s REALLY hard to pick just one!
BH: Fair enough. What do you think it takes to be a good WYSIWYG performer?
CH: I think you just have to have an interesting story to tell and an ability to put it out there in your own voice.
BH: Not always an easy task, I imagine. If someone wants to take the plunge and perform at WYSIWYG, what do they need to do?
CH: They have to have a blog, since that’s our whole schtick, and they can just visit our website and they’ll find all sorts of info about the show, including upcoming dates and contact information.
BH: What’s planned for the rest of the year?
CH: We’re experimenting with not doing themes each month. I’ve had a lot of people who would be great for the show but didn’t have stories or material that matched any of the upcoming themes, so we’re opening it up and making it something of a free-for-all. So far it’s been really fun!
WYSIWYG Talent Show: “Worst. Sex. Ever. IV.”
Wednesday, February 14th
8 p.m. (Doors open at 7:30)
Bowery Poetry Club
308 Bowery at Bleecker
For advance tickets, click here.
Sunday, February 4, 2007
Review - Apocalypse Neo (NY Neo Futurists and Horse Trade Theatre)
Stage Buzz Review by Byrne Harrison
Those people who’ve only experienced the NY Neo-Futurists through Too Much Light Makes the Baby Go Blind (TMLMTBGB), their late night show featuring thirty plays in sixty minutes, may legitimately wonder if the they can pull off a mainstage production featuring three longer plays and still maintain the same wild energy, innovative spirit, and anarchistic vibe. Good news . . . they can, and remarkably well, at that.
Apocalypse Neo, presented by the NY Neo-Futurists and Horse Trade Theatre and currently playing at the Kraine Theater, is a three-play Neo-Futurist look at the end of the world. It has everything that a TMLMTBGB audience has come to expect: actors playing themselves; confessions; revelations; music; rhythm; audience participation; props; humor; sympathy; pizza; time limits; and the occasional naughty bit. All this in a longer format that allows the audience to completely immerse itself in the plays, something that is harder to do in TMLMTBGB.
The first play, Crystal Skillman’s Revelations of a City of Us, imagines Clay Adams as the last man on Earth. Or rather, it imagines Clay imagining he’s the last man on Earth. The apocalypse hasn’t happened, but Clay is going to give it a dry run to make sure he’s prepared. Joined by the last women on Earth, Tara Perry, Lauren Kincheloe, Sharon Freedman, and Jenny Williams, Clay muses on the nature of the end of the world, survival, Neo-Futurism, pizza and zombies. Along the way the survivors discover that the end of the world may not be too different from the way it is now.
Justin Tolley’s play, In which the end of the world . . . , is the second of the evening, and the one most recognizable as the offspring of TMLMTBGB. It is set up as a debate between two teams: one arguing that the apocalypse will happen during our lifetime; the other arguing that it won’t. Each team gets to make an opening argument, rebuttal, cross-examination, and final concluding rebuttal. Each argument and rebuttal is, in and of itself, a separate play, chosen by the team from several possible plays prepared by the actors in the show. Like TMLMTBGB, no two audiences will see the exactly the same lineup. The evening I saw the show, it featured two particularly good pieces: Popcorn, a video montage showing the horrible things, real and imagined, that are ushering in the apocalypse; and There’s So Much To Do, a piece that is one of the most life-affirming things I’ve seen in a long time. At the end of all the arguments, moderator Rob Neill makes the audience choose which team wins, and in effect, whether we win or not.
The final play, Rob Neill’s Monkeyland II (anatk 21.10), is my favorite one in Apocalypse Neo, and unfortunately, the hardest to describe. It won’t be everyone’s cup of tea; the play has a mythic, avant garde quality that people who prefer representational theatre may not appreciate. However, if you can approach the play with an open and accepting mind, and believe that a windup toy monkey can be a post-apocalyptic wandering hero, it is pretty amazing.
Apocalypse Neo has an extremely limited run - six performances ending Saturday, February 10th. Do yourself a favor; go to one of them before the show closes. And if you attend Friday or Saturday’s show, do yourself another favor; stick around and see Too Much Light Makes the Baby Go Blind. You’ll be glad you did.
Revelations of a City of Us
Written by Crystal Skillman
Directed by Chris Dippel
Performed by Tara Perry, Lauren Kincheloe, Sharon Freedman, Jenny Williams, Clay Adams
In which the end of the world . . .
Created by Justin Tolley
Written and performed by Erica Livingston, Lindsay Brandon Hunter, Emma Gordon, Michael Davis, Jarrod Zayas, Justin Tolley, Rob Neill
Directed by Mark Armstrong
Monkeyland II (anatk 21.10)
Written by Rob Neill
Directed by Jacquelyn Landgraf
Performed by Eevin Hartsough, Ryan Good, Jorge Cordova, Leslie Korein
The Kraine Theater
85 East 4th Street
http://www.nynf.org/
Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays at 8pm through February 10th
Those people who’ve only experienced the NY Neo-Futurists through Too Much Light Makes the Baby Go Blind (TMLMTBGB), their late night show featuring thirty plays in sixty minutes, may legitimately wonder if the they can pull off a mainstage production featuring three longer plays and still maintain the same wild energy, innovative spirit, and anarchistic vibe. Good news . . . they can, and remarkably well, at that.
Apocalypse Neo, presented by the NY Neo-Futurists and Horse Trade Theatre and currently playing at the Kraine Theater, is a three-play Neo-Futurist look at the end of the world. It has everything that a TMLMTBGB audience has come to expect: actors playing themselves; confessions; revelations; music; rhythm; audience participation; props; humor; sympathy; pizza; time limits; and the occasional naughty bit. All this in a longer format that allows the audience to completely immerse itself in the plays, something that is harder to do in TMLMTBGB.
The first play, Crystal Skillman’s Revelations of a City of Us, imagines Clay Adams as the last man on Earth. Or rather, it imagines Clay imagining he’s the last man on Earth. The apocalypse hasn’t happened, but Clay is going to give it a dry run to make sure he’s prepared. Joined by the last women on Earth, Tara Perry, Lauren Kincheloe, Sharon Freedman, and Jenny Williams, Clay muses on the nature of the end of the world, survival, Neo-Futurism, pizza and zombies. Along the way the survivors discover that the end of the world may not be too different from the way it is now.
Justin Tolley’s play, In which the end of the world . . . , is the second of the evening, and the one most recognizable as the offspring of TMLMTBGB. It is set up as a debate between two teams: one arguing that the apocalypse will happen during our lifetime; the other arguing that it won’t. Each team gets to make an opening argument, rebuttal, cross-examination, and final concluding rebuttal. Each argument and rebuttal is, in and of itself, a separate play, chosen by the team from several possible plays prepared by the actors in the show. Like TMLMTBGB, no two audiences will see the exactly the same lineup. The evening I saw the show, it featured two particularly good pieces: Popcorn, a video montage showing the horrible things, real and imagined, that are ushering in the apocalypse; and There’s So Much To Do, a piece that is one of the most life-affirming things I’ve seen in a long time. At the end of all the arguments, moderator Rob Neill makes the audience choose which team wins, and in effect, whether we win or not.
The final play, Rob Neill’s Monkeyland II (anatk 21.10), is my favorite one in Apocalypse Neo, and unfortunately, the hardest to describe. It won’t be everyone’s cup of tea; the play has a mythic, avant garde quality that people who prefer representational theatre may not appreciate. However, if you can approach the play with an open and accepting mind, and believe that a windup toy monkey can be a post-apocalyptic wandering hero, it is pretty amazing.
Apocalypse Neo has an extremely limited run - six performances ending Saturday, February 10th. Do yourself a favor; go to one of them before the show closes. And if you attend Friday or Saturday’s show, do yourself another favor; stick around and see Too Much Light Makes the Baby Go Blind. You’ll be glad you did.
Revelations of a City of Us
Written by Crystal Skillman
Directed by Chris Dippel
Performed by Tara Perry, Lauren Kincheloe, Sharon Freedman, Jenny Williams, Clay Adams
In which the end of the world . . .
Created by Justin Tolley
Written and performed by Erica Livingston, Lindsay Brandon Hunter, Emma Gordon, Michael Davis, Jarrod Zayas, Justin Tolley, Rob Neill
Directed by Mark Armstrong
Monkeyland II (anatk 21.10)
Written by Rob Neill
Directed by Jacquelyn Landgraf
Performed by Eevin Hartsough, Ryan Good, Jorge Cordova, Leslie Korein
The Kraine Theater
85 East 4th Street
http://www.nynf.org/
Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays at 8pm through February 10th
Thursday, January 18, 2007
Review - The Servant of Two Masters (The New Globe Theatre, Inc.)
Stage Buzz Review by Byrne Harrison
When adapting a piece of classic theatre, many writers tend to modernize the play, either by cutting it mercilessly to better suit those with short attention spans, or by filling it with contemporary language and references for fear the audience might be too dim to follow slightly archaic language. It is a great pleasure to discover that Anne and Stuart Vaughan, in adapting Carlo Goldoni’s masterpiece, The Servant of Two Masters, decided that Goldoni knew what he was doing and left the play virtually intact.
Admittedly, there are times when the overwrought language makes the audience groan, but the characters are groaning right along, because this Servant is performed with a wink and a nod to an audience that is meant to be in on all the jokes.
The linchpin of the play is the wily, and perpetually hungry, servant Truffaldino (Steve Campbell), who signs on as the servant to two gentlemen, hoping to double his wages without either of them figuring out what’s going on. One these gentlemen is, in fact, a woman named Beatrice (Jana Mestecky) disguising herself as her dead brother. “His” arrival in Venice disrupts the engagement of Clarice (Alessandra Ziviani) and Silvio (Grant Kretchik), and kicks off a series of events that lead to wild misunderstandings, secret meetings, curses, a dual, a handful of attempted suicides, and, of course, the inevitable happy ending.
Campbell, as Truffaldino, handles the farce, wordplay, and physical humor well - imagine Matthew Broderick channeling Groucho Marx and you’ll get the idea. Also noteworthy are Gray Stevenson as Clarice’s flirty maid, Smeraldina, Rich Hollman, who gleefully mugs and preens as Beatrice’s lover, Florindo, and Ziviani and Kretchik as the interrupted lovers. Ziviani, in particular, has some wonderful scene-stealing moments.
The production did have a few flaws. Some of the slapstick bits went on too long and started to become stale. At several points, the play seemed to sputter and stall; scenes that should have been fast and frantic were instead filled with pauses and stage business that slowed them down. Mestecky’s Beatrice made no attempt to appear or sound masculine, other than by wearing men’s clothing and pulling her hair into a ponytail. This removed any possibility of exploring the frustration Beatrice must have experienced trying to pass, as well as the liberation the masquerade could provide. But generally speaking, these problems didn’t take too much away from the production.
On the technical side, the show featured a bright and versatile set designed by Bart Healy and some wonderful costumes from designer Martin A. Thaler. Fight director Craig Rising did a marvelous job as well, especially with a humorous swordfight between Beatrice and Silvio.
Despite its minor flaws, this is a generally strong production of a remarkably funny play. If you like classic farce, The Servant of Two Masters is well worth seeing.
Written by Carlo Goldoni
Adapted by Anne and Stuart Vaughan
Directed by Stuart Vaughan
Theatre 33
11 West 43rd Street, 3rd Floor
Through January 21st
Tues.-Sat.: 8 pm
Sat.: 2 pm
Sun: 3 pm
When adapting a piece of classic theatre, many writers tend to modernize the play, either by cutting it mercilessly to better suit those with short attention spans, or by filling it with contemporary language and references for fear the audience might be too dim to follow slightly archaic language. It is a great pleasure to discover that Anne and Stuart Vaughan, in adapting Carlo Goldoni’s masterpiece, The Servant of Two Masters, decided that Goldoni knew what he was doing and left the play virtually intact.
Admittedly, there are times when the overwrought language makes the audience groan, but the characters are groaning right along, because this Servant is performed with a wink and a nod to an audience that is meant to be in on all the jokes.
The linchpin of the play is the wily, and perpetually hungry, servant Truffaldino (Steve Campbell), who signs on as the servant to two gentlemen, hoping to double his wages without either of them figuring out what’s going on. One these gentlemen is, in fact, a woman named Beatrice (Jana Mestecky) disguising herself as her dead brother. “His” arrival in Venice disrupts the engagement of Clarice (Alessandra Ziviani) and Silvio (Grant Kretchik), and kicks off a series of events that lead to wild misunderstandings, secret meetings, curses, a dual, a handful of attempted suicides, and, of course, the inevitable happy ending.
Campbell, as Truffaldino, handles the farce, wordplay, and physical humor well - imagine Matthew Broderick channeling Groucho Marx and you’ll get the idea. Also noteworthy are Gray Stevenson as Clarice’s flirty maid, Smeraldina, Rich Hollman, who gleefully mugs and preens as Beatrice’s lover, Florindo, and Ziviani and Kretchik as the interrupted lovers. Ziviani, in particular, has some wonderful scene-stealing moments.
The production did have a few flaws. Some of the slapstick bits went on too long and started to become stale. At several points, the play seemed to sputter and stall; scenes that should have been fast and frantic were instead filled with pauses and stage business that slowed them down. Mestecky’s Beatrice made no attempt to appear or sound masculine, other than by wearing men’s clothing and pulling her hair into a ponytail. This removed any possibility of exploring the frustration Beatrice must have experienced trying to pass, as well as the liberation the masquerade could provide. But generally speaking, these problems didn’t take too much away from the production.
On the technical side, the show featured a bright and versatile set designed by Bart Healy and some wonderful costumes from designer Martin A. Thaler. Fight director Craig Rising did a marvelous job as well, especially with a humorous swordfight between Beatrice and Silvio.
Despite its minor flaws, this is a generally strong production of a remarkably funny play. If you like classic farce, The Servant of Two Masters is well worth seeing.
Written by Carlo Goldoni
Adapted by Anne and Stuart Vaughan
Directed by Stuart Vaughan
Theatre 33
11 West 43rd Street, 3rd Floor
Through January 21st
Tues.-Sat.: 8 pm
Sat.: 2 pm
Sun: 3 pm
Saturday, January 6, 2007
Review - Nutcracker: Rated R (Angela Harriell and Theater for the New City)
Stage Buzz Review by Byrne Harrison
There are those who will avoid Nutcracker: Rated R based on the title, assuming that this is a snarky parody of the beloved Christmas ballet. The truth of the matter, however, is that Angela Harriell has created a unique and intriguing work that is at once an elegant homage to Tchaikovsky’s original, a sly send up of New York in the 1980s and today, and a showcase for her considerable talents as a choreographer and dramatist and her cast as dancers and actors.
In this version of the Nutcracker, Clara (Juliana Smith) is a rebellious teen attending a Christmas party with her family. Her strange uncle Drosselmeyer (David F. Slone, Esq.) gives her, not a nutcracker, but an album by an androgynous singer from the ‘80s called Firecrotch. Left behind by the drunken partygoers, Clara falls asleep in the restaurant and sees the battle between the Rats (in this version, very sexy rats) and the suited and cellphoned Corporate Soldiers.
Where Tchaikovsky has Clara dance with her nutcracker, Harriell has her dance with the Firecrotch Record, using some very amusing choreography. Imagine how a record would move and you’ll get a sense of it. Drosselmeyer’s record is, of course, magic, and it sends her back in time to New York in the ‘80s. It’s there that Harriell shines as a choreographer, weaving a Spanish block party, Chinese delivery people, strippers, coke addicts, and even street people into amazing dance numbers. Two pieces in particular were spectacular: The Blow Fairies, which showed the highs and lows of cocaine addiction; and Derelicts, a sublime dance featuring two homeless people in Central Park. Eventually, Drosselmeyer shows Clara her parents in their youth and takes her to The Stall Club where she finally gets to meet her idol, Firecrotch.
This remarkable show features a talented ensemble of dancers and actors, all of whom, with the exception of Slone, play multiple roles. Of particular note are Amber Shirley, a beautiful and athletic dancer who plays the Rat Queen, Jesus Chapa-Malacara, who is outstanding in both Derelicts and The Blow Fairies, Clare Tobin, as the Blow Queen, and Joseph Schles, who is amusing as hell as a Chinese delivery boy in Race of the Dragons. The cast also includes Gregory Dubin, Christopher L. Dunston, Christina Johnson, Kimberly Lantz, Kate Lawrence, Adam Pellegrine, Renee Scalise, and Emma Stein.
Hopefully, this is not the last we’ll see of Nutcracker: Rated R.
Choreographed by Angela Harriell
http://www.nutcrackerratedr.com
Theater for the New City
155 First Avenue
There are those who will avoid Nutcracker: Rated R based on the title, assuming that this is a snarky parody of the beloved Christmas ballet. The truth of the matter, however, is that Angela Harriell has created a unique and intriguing work that is at once an elegant homage to Tchaikovsky’s original, a sly send up of New York in the 1980s and today, and a showcase for her considerable talents as a choreographer and dramatist and her cast as dancers and actors.
In this version of the Nutcracker, Clara (Juliana Smith) is a rebellious teen attending a Christmas party with her family. Her strange uncle Drosselmeyer (David F. Slone, Esq.) gives her, not a nutcracker, but an album by an androgynous singer from the ‘80s called Firecrotch. Left behind by the drunken partygoers, Clara falls asleep in the restaurant and sees the battle between the Rats (in this version, very sexy rats) and the suited and cellphoned Corporate Soldiers.
Where Tchaikovsky has Clara dance with her nutcracker, Harriell has her dance with the Firecrotch Record, using some very amusing choreography. Imagine how a record would move and you’ll get a sense of it. Drosselmeyer’s record is, of course, magic, and it sends her back in time to New York in the ‘80s. It’s there that Harriell shines as a choreographer, weaving a Spanish block party, Chinese delivery people, strippers, coke addicts, and even street people into amazing dance numbers. Two pieces in particular were spectacular: The Blow Fairies, which showed the highs and lows of cocaine addiction; and Derelicts, a sublime dance featuring two homeless people in Central Park. Eventually, Drosselmeyer shows Clara her parents in their youth and takes her to The Stall Club where she finally gets to meet her idol, Firecrotch.
This remarkable show features a talented ensemble of dancers and actors, all of whom, with the exception of Slone, play multiple roles. Of particular note are Amber Shirley, a beautiful and athletic dancer who plays the Rat Queen, Jesus Chapa-Malacara, who is outstanding in both Derelicts and The Blow Fairies, Clare Tobin, as the Blow Queen, and Joseph Schles, who is amusing as hell as a Chinese delivery boy in Race of the Dragons. The cast also includes Gregory Dubin, Christopher L. Dunston, Christina Johnson, Kimberly Lantz, Kate Lawrence, Adam Pellegrine, Renee Scalise, and Emma Stein.
Hopefully, this is not the last we’ll see of Nutcracker: Rated R.
Choreographed by Angela Harriell
http://www.nutcrackerratedr.com
Theater for the New City
155 First Avenue
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