Friday, May 18, 2007

Gone Wilde

Wednesday night I saw friend Rob Urbinati's cheeky and clever new play West Moon Street, based on Oscar Wilde's "Lord Arthur Savile's Crime." Rob has deftly channeled Wilde's style in this comic mystery, in which young Arthur takes a fortune teller's prognostications much too seriously. The prediction? That Arthur--engaged to be married to Sybil--will commit a murder before he is married. Arthur immediately plans to complete his "duty" ASAP--even if it means postponing the wedding (much to his intended's dismay).

In typical Wilde-an form, this play deals in high-brow literary wit, frothy personalities, and mock-serious catastrophes. Under Davis McCallum's expert direction, the excellent cast turns in precise and crackling performances. I was particularly thrilled to see actor Glenn Peters earn huge and well-deserved laughs as Arthur's snappish aunt, Lady Clem. I reviewed Peters in last year's Murdering Marlowe (in which he played the churlish title role), and it was a treat to see him dressed as a woman and delivering comic barbs with verbal dexterity. Lady Clem is Queen of the Malapropism here, clumsily substituting "circumcise" for "circumspect."

The play (produced by the promising Prospect Theater Company) has received accolades from the press--even the Times, which essentially elevated Rob to uber-Wilde status. It will likely be published in the coming months and will hopefully find a happy, healthy life in regional theater.

Designer Naomi Wolff (not to be confused with the brilliant feminist writer) has created a veritable little girl's dream trunk full of gorgeous costumes. In particular, the dresses for Lady Windemere (played with starched venomous glee by Judith Hawking) are absolutely sensational--saturated with color and oozing with Wild-ean excess. I hope they are able to put them to good use after the play has closed! I'll be keeping an eye out at costume parties come October ...

My favorite line: "The world is a stage, and the play is badly cast."

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

German Fiesta


I'm back in the mad city after a trip to Houston to watch my brother Jeff graduate from my alma mater, Rice University.

I watched plenty of high emotions on display in the sultry high temperatures, but I didn't see any actual theater in Texas. I do, however, have two new reviews up at Show Business Weekly this week:

American Fiesta is Austin-based Steven Tomlinson's funny and fact-filled solo show that chronicles his manic love for (read: obsession with) the multi-colored, go-with-everything dishes known as Fiestaware. I grew up eating off Fiestaware (not the overpriced antique originals, but the newer, shiner version), and it's easy to see how Tomlinson comes to fixate on the colorful, saturated hues. I still remember vying for certain colors at Thanksgiving dinner. Tomlinson smartly uses this obsession as a springboard for talking about the country's red- and blue-state divide. I made a side trip to Austin to visit my dear friend Simi (and family) over the weekend, and it is interesting to see, even geographically, how disparate the landscape is between New York City and the Texas countryside. At a Fiestaware convention, Tomlinson notes an overabundance of participants who are either young gay men or elderly Midwestern women. Fiestaware, it seems, could be a uniting force--not that he would allow us to draw any conclusions that easily ... this show is smart, witty, and challenging.

The Tony Award nominations came out this morning, and I was very disappointed that LoveMusik didn't make the list of nominees for Best New Musical. As you can tell by my review, I was enraptured with the unique artistry and dedicated courage of this production. Plenty of critics and audience members have dismissed the show as a bore, but to me, it was as intellectually intriguing and stimulating as theater can get. Slow-moving and deliberately paced? Yes. Razor-sharp and emotionally fulfilling? Yes, but only if you're willing to invest your heart and mind (and a bit of patience that pays off fully in the end).

Thankfully, Michael Cerveris and Donna Murphy were both nominated for their marvelous, unforgettable characterizations of Kurt Weill and Lotte Lenya, and the splendid David Pittu scored a nomination for his dynamic turn as playwright Bertolt Brecht. When I saw LoveMusik, I thought, "If only there were more shows like this."

I was thrilled to see Spring Awakening, another challenging (and German-derived) show (and probably my favorite of the season), rack up a slew of nominations, too. That cast is dynamite, and mark my words, they will rock out on the Tony telecast!

Wednesday, May 9, 2007

Oui, Oui, Monsieur

A few weeks ago I reviewed my first film, a lovely collage of shorts called Paris, je t'aime. It was great fun to analyze film (also a very theatrical medium). Here's a link to my review, which appears in this week's issue of Show Business Weekly.

A handful of reviews from my drama-ful week are now up at offoffonline:

Mother Load: Amy Wilson's fierce solo show on the trials of modern motherhood.

A New Brain: The Astoria Performing Arts Center impassioned revival of William Finn's playful, intimate musical. This is one of my favorite shows, and the production does not disappoint--I may very well head back for another visit!

Victor/Victoria: The latest offering from Brooklyn's Gallery Players--a gender-bending musical comedy set in 1930s Paris.

Friday, May 4, 2007

Brains, Brecht, and Brooklyn

I'm set to review a handful of musicals this weekend:

Tonight is a revival of William Finn's funny and fantastical musical A New Brain, presented by the Astoria Performing Arts Center. They're producing the show at the Variety Boys & Girls Club in Astoria, and it's definitely a treat to be able to walk from my apartment to a theater! I reviewed APAC's very well-done production of Picasso at the Lapin Agile last fall, and their production of Forever Plaid nabbed some IT Award nominations last year. This is a company to watch, and it's exciting to have a theater group on my home turf.

Tomorrow I have a Broadway double feature, and I feel incredibly spoiled! First up is the Manhattan Theatre Club's LoveMusik, a new musical about the tempestuous romance of Kurt Weill and Lotte Lenya, embodied by Broadway stars Michael Cerveris and Donna Murphy. Click here for a fascinating interview with the show's director, the legendary Harold Prince.

Then I head to Studio 54 for the Roundabout's revival of 110 in the Shade, starring the magnificent Audra McDonald, who took home 4 Tony Awards before she turned 30. It's been a while since she's been on Broadway, and this should be a thrilling (and damp) homecoming. Also featured in the cast is Christopher Innvar, who played Floyd in the original cast of Off-Broadway's Floyd Collins.

Sunday I head out to Brooklyn to review the Gallery Players' revival of Victor/Victoria, a musical about which I know very little, other than the fact that Julie Andrews once played the famously gender-ambiguous title role.

Such a wide range of characters, music, and subject matter!

Thursday, May 3, 2007

Mommy Mayhem

Last night I saw Amy Wilson's excellent one-woman show Mother Load, a tough and touching look at contemporary motherhood. Wilson is an exemplary writer and fierce performer, and she and friend/director Julie Kramer have created a lively and incisive piece of theater.

Last week I had the chance to speak with these warm and witty women; take a look at my preview article to get the inside scoop: "Strollers, Sanctimommies, and Self-Control: Amy Wilson Takes on a Mother Load." My review of the show will appear on offoffonline next week.

Wednesday, May 2, 2007

Summer Acting Programs to the Rescue!

My latest feature--on summer acting programs--appears in this week's edition of Show Business Weekly. Featured programs include the Ensemble Studio Theatre, the Atlantic Acting School, the Neighborhood Playhouse, the Lee Strasberg Theatre & Film Institute, Tisch School of the Arts, and Five Towns College.

To read it online, click here. I especially like the "Baywatch"-esque photo they tucked in there. [Disclaimer: Sometimes the formatting gets a little jumbled in the online version, so try to overlook any textual oddities.]

Cookies and Karenina

May arrived in the midst of a (typically) theater-heavy week. In a lovely turn of events, I attended the first two shows this week as an observer, not a critic. It’s always nice to watch a production without clutching a pen, although I often find myself taking mental notes.

First off, on Sunday afternoon I saw Neal Zupancic’s new play The Tragedy of John (produced by Theatre of the Expendable, at the Studio Theatre at Theatre Row), featuring my multi-talented pal Nathan Brisby.

As I entered the theater, the actor playing John (the excellent and inert Liam Joynt) was firmly entrenched on one end of a couch—comfortably slouched, gnawing on Cheetos, staring at the TV, and pretty much defining the term “couch potato.”

It was a nice, emblematic touch by director Corinne Neal for indeed, it seems that John’s central downfall is his inability to both physically move or to develop real, meaningful relationships. Although his friend Amy (who has taken refuge in his apartment after a devastating and abusive marriage) attempts to draw him out, he stays mum about the unspoken tragedy (two years earlier) that reduced him to this state.

When his friend Steve (my friend Nathan) arrives for an evening of guy movies (Blood Sport is on tap), he brings along Julia, the new girl he is dating. Julia, he tells John, might very well be “the one,” although it is clear from her arrival that there are more promising sparks between her and John than her and the rather oblivious Steve. Let’s just say that Julia eventually finds her own persuasive method for getting John off the couch.

The Tragedy of John is a living room drama and, at times, rather intriguing in its exploration of contemporary relationships—most of all, the myriad ways that truths are told, secrets are disclosed, and information is meted out between people. Cookies appear in various forms (baked by various people; thrown by—and at—various people) and they are an apt (and edible) metaphor for this often catastrophic series of conversations.

This all sounds a bit sitcom-esque, and the play does get off to a rather patchy and episodic beginning. Many of the opening scenes barely got moving before the lights went to blackout, drenching the stage in darkness and depriving the audience of getting into the rhythm of the material. It wasn’t until much later (in a 90-minute production) that I began to feel connected to the piece.

I always wonder if this tendency to write clipped scenes is a result of our attention-deficit MTV generation; I also began to think about the punctuation of theater. Much depends on how (and when) a playwright chooses to end a scene. True, when I saw the play I was also finishing up Lynne Truss’s witty and educational punctuation book Eats, Shoots & Leaves, so I did have semicolons on the brain more than I usually do. But for whatever reason, during the first five or six rapid blackouts, I cocked my head to the side in confusion. This play—and these performances—deserve a finer-tuned (and punctuated) narrative.

Nathan told me that Zupancic wrote the play after overhearing a comment about a “lazy face.” Apparently, the indolent person in question couldn’t even be bothered to form his face into the appropriate expression. If anything, The Tragedy of John examines the perils of inaction—and betraying your friends, and generally being a lazy sack of a person. Which is not a bad thing to preach against, when you think about. I just wasn’t quite sure what it was rooting for.

As many of you know, it’s always thrilling to watch a friend perform. If you’ve heard Nathan sing, you can testify to his stunning vocal prowess, and I relished the opportunity to watch him in more dramatic (and non-singing) mode. Pay attention to those performers who are both good singers and good actors—there’s a deft musicality that informs their work, even when they don’t sing a note. Nathan turned that on as he channeled explosive anger in a vicious argument—so much so that I couldn’t even giggle when he ran into the wall as he stormed out.

Monday night Don and I went to see Ten, a play reading at the Public Theater produced by Second Generation (2g) in celebration of its tenth anniversary season. The staged reading featured ten (get the theme?) short plays by Asian American playwrights and performed, for the most part, by Asian American actors.

It was a mixed bag of an evening, writing- and acting-wise, but we both enjoyed Carla Ching’s The Further Adventures of the Little Goth Girl, which chronicled the coming-of-age of a young girl taught to fear strangers by her overbearing Chinese mother. Our friend Qui Nguyen (of the ribald Vampire Cowboys Theatre Company) contributed a hilarious exploration of Asian Accents in the Key of Sucky Sucky. In his typically irreverent and entertaining style, he constructed a newscast that reported on the death of “pidgin English” among the younger generations of Asian Americans.

A few reading recommendations:

On Monday I had the opportunity to hear Michael Lindsay (Professor of Sociology at Rice University, my alma mater) talk about his new book, which Oxford University Press will be publishing this fall. Faith in the Halls of Power investigates how evangelicals have moved into high-powered positions in business, politics, and Hollywood. Lindsay interviewed 360 people (from Jimmy Carter to Kathie Lee Gifford) about their faith and how it figures into their careers. It sounds like an intriguing book, and Lindsay was an incredibly engaging and lively speaker. I especially enjoyed his story about a CEO in the Houston oil industry who invited him to lunch at the Four Seasons and then expected Lindsay to pick up the check. When you make millions of dollars, it seems that your sense of entitlement can trap you—faith or no faith—into thinking graduate students make more than their $12,000/year stipend. After paying for the $160 lunch, Lindsay reported months of subsisting on peanut butter and jelly.

On Tuesday nights I volunteer at a local cancer hospital where I visit patients to give them some much-needed distraction. Last night I spoke with a delightful woman who had just begun to reread Anna Karenina. She told me that she was eager to see how she would experience it now, with more maturity in hand. (“As a teenager, I read it as a romance,” she confided.) I replied that we could probably read anything romantically as teenagers. But it is fascinating to consider how our experiences of books change as we change. Food for thought. In any case, I’m putting Anna Karenina on my “to read” list.