Tuesday, November 18, 2014
"Punk Rock" (at the Lucille Lortel Theatre through December 7, 2014)
Noah Robbins and Will Pullen (Photo by Joan Marcus)
British playwright' Simon Stephens adaptation of Mark Haddon's novel "The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time" is currently a big hit on Broadway. He will undoubtedly find additional favor with this gripping, but also terrifying portrait of British teenagers in peril inspired by his own experiences as a teacher. The seventeen year olds preparing for their mock A level exams we meet are financially privileged. However, they are neither emotionally mature nor brave enough to either handle or consider seriously the sign-posts that one of their pack is seriously skewed, if not downright demented.To read the entire review please go to http://curtainup.com/punkrockmcc14.html
Saturday, November 15, 2014
"Grand Concourse" (now at the Playwrights Horizons through November 30, 2014)
(L-R) Ismenia Mendes and Quincy Tyler Bernstine in Grand Concourse (Photo: Joan Marcus)
How nice it is to be personally moved and stimulated by a
new play as happened with "Grand Concourse" by Heidi Schreck. First
introduced to the playwright when her play "There Are No More
Big Secrets" was
produced at the Rattlestick Theater in 2010, I am not familiar with her writing
for the TV series "Nurse Jackie." That she is also a fine actor
with numerous New York and regional credits only confirms her as multi-disciplined
and talented. I am pleased to bring to your attention her latest and another excellent play
that again relies on as well as benefits from her "...Big Secrets" director Kip Fagan.
Set in a soup kitchen in the Bronx, it involves the
spiritual and secular conflict in which a Catholic sister Shelley (Quincy Tyler
Bernstine) finds herself. This dilemma applies to the act of forgiving, a very
basic and fundamental core of her Christian belief. At the start, Shelley is in
prayer in front of a microwave for an amusing reason. In her late thirties, she
is far from humorless but is, however, very serious about her commitment to the
daily routine that includes chopping up
vegetables for the hearty soups for the homeless, as well as seeing to the care
and maintenance of the facility of which she is co-manager.
Along with her dedication to this daily routine, Shelley depends a lot on late-twenty-something Oscar
(Bobby Moreno), an easy-going Dominican, employed as a security guard whose primary
job is to make sure that none of the homeless make trouble, or make their way from the dining room to the kitchen
- - - that is except for Frog (Lee Wilkov), an aging, somewhat scattered intellectual
whose frequent visits are tolerated despite ample evidence of his unstable but
not-dangerous mental state apparently held in check with medication.
For the element of danger and for the potential for the unexpected
which you can be sure is forthcoming, there is Emma (Ismenia Mendez), a disquieting
nineteen year-old college drop-out. Her
request to work as a kitchen helper is tentatively approved by Shelley,
especially when Emma tells Shelley she has cancer and just beginning chemo
therapy.
Despite the evidence that surfaces that Emma is more needy
and unstable than either Shelley or Oscar are initially aware, they are
unprepared for the havoc and mayhem ahead. On the surface, Shreck's play seems uncomplicated
as its four characters carve out an uneasy alliance. That it becomes a profound
study in compassion and tolerance amid crises makes it very special study in
human behavior.
Bernstine is heart-breaking as the Sister whose devotion to
her faith is taxed to the breaking point not only by Mendes but also by a
unresolved long-standing relationship with her own family. Mendes may be pretty,
but is nevertheless scary as the willfully deceptive Emma. Moreno gives the
play a welcomed buoyancy as the sweet-tempered guard who allows an unguarded
incident to come close to ruining his life. Frog is kind of a running joke through
the play, but Wilkof's terrific performance defines him also as a poignant and
pathetic soul whose deteriorating mind is slowly betraying him. The kitchen has
been effectively designed by Rachel Hauck to accommodate a play that will keep
on cooking in your mind long after you see it.
The performance
schedule for GRAND CONCOURSE is Tuesdays through Fridays at 7:30
PM, Saturdays at 2 & 7:30 PM
and Sundays at 2 & 7PM. There are special Monday evening performances at 7:30 PM on
both November 10 and November 24. Single tickets ($60-75) may be purchased
online via www.TicketCentral.com,
by phone at (212) 279-4200 (Noon-8pm daily) and in person at the Ticket Central
Box Office, 416 West 42nd Street (between Ninth & Tenth Avenues).
Wednesday, November 5, 2014
"The Last Ship" (at the Neil Simon Theater)
Michael Esper and Rachel Tucker (Photo: Joan Marcus)
Pop-rock star Sting (of The Police and solo fame) is making
a splashy debut on Broadway. It is not with a personal appearance, but rather
as the composer of an impressive and rather traditionally conceived musical. Not
be entirely autobiographical, it has been culled from Sting's memories of his early
life growing up in an English coastal town that was once renowned for its
ship-building industry. A grand and
eclectically constructed score that is stunningly removed from anything
resembling the rock musical style, it resonates fervently with the influences of
Kurt Weill, as well as the folk cannon, sea chanties and the jazz genre. At its
best, it is the rock (in the original sense of the word) upon which the
musical's weakly structured book co-written by John Logan and Brian Yorkey has
been tethered.
Even beyond the lush melodic textures that carry the show,
Sting's gritty and stirring lyrics do more to inform the characters' feelings
than the feeble, minimally involving story. This is a shame as there is a
thread running through this musical of an impassioned community fighting for
its life after losing its sustaining industry. But the thread is weakest at its
center as it plods through the story of a man, Gideon Fletcher, who returns to
the town he left as a restless youth to escape the life of a ship-builder. Upon
his return and just as shiftless as ever, he not only finds that his former
girl friend has born and raised the son he never knew he had but also has found
love and support from another man. This plot line is anchored to the
incredulous decision by the unemployed workers to build one last ship. Total
hokum, but we get on board in order to believe.
Notable for its lusty, tough-as- nails performances from
both the men and the women, but with a particularly riveting one by Michael
Esper, as Gideon, this musical is also graced with terrific choreography by
Steven Hoggett. The exhilarating foot-stomping dances as well as the melancholy
waltzes and beautifully sung ballads define the hard-scrabble life of the
community. A distinctly dark show in its dramatic content and in its grimly
effective scenic design by David Zinn, "The Last Ship," will most
likely see Broadway as it last port of call.
"On The Town" (at the Lyric Theater, 213 West 42nd Street)
There is a very good reason why members of the audience feel
they can't help but dance up the aisles after the curtain falls on this
exuberant, ebullient effervescent revival of this classic 1944 musical about
sailors on leave looking for love. It would be enough if you only had the
gorgeous score by Leonard Bernstein to lift your spirits, but there is the
warmly funny book written by geniuses Betty Comden and Adolph Green, and the alternately
robust and dreamy choreography created by Joshua Bergasse to further enrich a
show that may be familiar to many. Just about every aspect of this musical that
has come to Broadway by way of a well-received summer production at Barrington
Stage in Massachusetts, is perfection as directed by John Rando.
There is
nothing summer-stock-ish about it visually. Its wonderfully mobile, spectacularly
stylized scenic and projection designs by Beowullf Boritt are a plentiful,
eye-filling delight, as enhanced by Jason Lyons' sparkling
lighting. But best of all is the unusually
large and versatile cast, all of whom have been winningly costumed to reflect
the 1940s by Jess Goldstein. Standout
among them is the sensational Tony Yazbeck, as Gabey the gob in search of his
love Miss Turnstile, as played to perfection by the lovely New York City
Ballet's principal ballerina Megan Fairchild, in her Broadway debut. Comical
show-stopper Jackie Hoffman deserves high marks for playing three equally
hilarious roles. And just think what a twenty-eight piece orchestra does for
such memorable songs as "Lonely Town," "Lucky to be Me,"
and "Some Other Time." It's enough to keep you swooning through the
crooning in this thoroughly joyous entertainment.
It's Only a Play" (at the Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre, 236 West 45th Street)
Megan Mullally and Nathan Lane (photo: Joan Marcus)
True enough that "It's Only a Play," but one only
wishes it was only a good play and not the joke-drenched, up-dated name-dropping, plot-deferred vehicle for Nathan Lane and
Matthew Broderick that is the hottest ticket in town. A flop when it was first
produced in 1986, Terrence McNally's insular
comedy is about an actor (Lane) who left the stage to star in a TV series and
his contentious relationship with his former friend a playwright (Matthew
Broderick) who is having his first play produced on Broadway.
The opening night party is in progress and it's a barrel of
laughs - - - that is when Lane is left alone to do his incomparable shtick, and
also when a host of opening nighters, including a producer, a critic, a star,
and others get time and space to say and do a lot of very funny, often
outrageous, and generally unacceptable things that more or less are meant to define
what life is like in the theater. It's a shame that the energy level drops
precipitously the minute Broderick enters, doing his version of a schlemiel in
need of a transfusion of blood.
There is no reason in the world the play should suddenly
come to a dead stop and only get revived when Broderick is not at the center of
it. Lane, however, is not left without a complimentary straight man. He is
Micah Stock who is hilarious as a young innocent (or is he?) wannabee who has
been hired as a coat checker and greeter and who parries expertly with Lane, as
does everyone else in the cast including a terrific Megan Mullally as the play-within-the-
play's nutty novice producer, a scene-stealing Stockard Channing as a
drug-fortified leading lady, an off-the-wall Rupert Grint, as a kleptomaniac
avant-garde director, and the excellent F. Murray Abraham, as an acerbic critic
who gets what's coming to him.
Jack O'Brien's direction, that is except for his inability
to extract something resembling a performance from Broderick, makes sure that
guffaws follow every gag and that we are never concerned overly with what happens
to whom and why at the producer's townhouse, as elegantly designed by Scott
Pask. If it's only a laugh that you need, then go for it.
"The Country House" (at the MTC Samuel J. Friedman Theatre 261 West 47th Street)
Blythe Danner (photo: Joan Marcus)
It won't take savvy theater audiences or more specifically
those familiar with the plays by Anton Chekhov (notably "Uncle
Vanya," and "The Seagull") to recognize the playful conceit deployed
by playwright Donald Margulies in his play set in a country home in
Williamstown, Massachusetts. Here, a family of self-centered theater folk feud,
fret and fuss about their careers while giving equal time to their complicated
personal lives. It's glib to be sure, with its unsubtle Chekhovian references
and its more unsubtle characters played for all they are worth by actors who
know how to land a line. Director Daniel Sullivan has taken this Manhattan
Theatre Club production as seriously as have the cast who make their numerable entrances
and exits with suitable affectation and appropriate aplomb in the handsomely
appointed home designed by John Lee Beatty.
It really isn't important to know who is cheating on whom,
whose career is on the wane, or whose lives are being wasted, only that the Blythe
Danner commands center stage as a fading stage and screen star while the others
take their cue, say their lines and orbit around her with an understandable sense of frustration. Some may enjoy playing
the Chekhov-game of naming each of the character's counterpart, while others
will grow weary as they also laugh at the prevailing pettiness and the phony
poignancy that abounds in this country house.
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