Our latest company project is the twisted-love story ‘Stitching’ by Anthony Neilsen, directed by our very own Timothy Haskell. It stars Meithal Dohan (you might remember her as the sexy Israeli in Showtime’s Weeds). Check out the website at www.stitchingtheplay.com and be sure to check it out at the Wild Project when it opens June 17.
Posts Tagged ‘Off Broadway’
Pity for "Glory Days"
I saw “Glory Days” on Monday. It opened on Tuesday. I really feel bad for this show. It wasn’t particularly good or memorable but I always like the little show to win. I am curious to understand the producers mind frame when they decided to bring this show to Broadway. They had a few things in its favor; a small set, cast and orchestra (so the show can’t possible cost more than $3 million), and small intimate transfers have been all the rage in recent years (see: “Spring Awakening,” “Avenue Q”, “…Spelling Bee,” “Passing Strange,” and “In the Heights”).
Now the shows that have succeeded on Broadway from a transfer from either Off-Broadway or from out of town (see: all above shows) had something different than “Glory Days.” Their move to Broadway was appropriate and they now have a feeling of a Broadway Show. Even “Spelling Bee,” which played in the same theatre as “Glory Days” felt like a Broadway show and had the quality of a Broadway show.
“Glory Days” move to Broadway is, in my opinion (and the opinion of most of the critics) is not appropriate. I look at the show, and I felt that the show should be Off-Broadway. That’s not a bad thing at all but not all shows are made for the Broadway stage. I feel like if “Glory Days” opened in an Off-Broadway house the reaction from both critics and audience members would be very different. I think they would applaud the book writer and composer, who are new to the industry (“Glory Days” marks the debut of both). When “I Love You Because” opened a few years ago (which had the same quality and feel as “Glory Days”) it had warm, mostly positive reviews and critics were looking forward to any future work from the composers. I feel that if it opened on Broadway, it would shutter not soon after (of course, it did shutter soon after its opening Off-Broadway, playing only 110 performances but who is really counting anyway).
It will be interesting to see how long “Glory Days” has to left to live at their home at the Circle in the Square theatre. I think that the creative team does have talent, they are still very young (22 and 23 years old) and they just have to develop their ideas and their identity as song writers. I can’t slam this show. I didn’t hate it, it just isn’t a Broadway show, and there are worse things currently playing on Broadway, with much bigger budgets.
EDIT NOTE: I wrote this entry before they closed the show on May 7, 2008, after one official performance. wow….
Go See From Up Here
Here is your assignment: Go to the Manhattan Theatre Club site and click to the page for From Up Here and buy your tickets to this amazing show. It’s playwright Liz Flahive’s debut work and it is so, so, so good. I’m already a big fan of Julie White’s ( I thought she was brilliant in The Little Dog Laughed), and was looking forward to seeing her anyway when we booked our tickets.
She was, as I expected, wonderful in the show, but the total of the production so far exceeds the sum of its parts that I can’t even begin to describe it. The plot is certainly the stuff of melodrama: It follows a “typical” suburban family dealing with the aftermath of some very scary behavior of the son’s. It could easily have been a live-action movie of the week, but it’s not. It’s very funny (and only partly in a gallows way), and the characterizations are dead on, from the disaffected teenage boy and his rebellious sister, to the over-achiever Mom, her second husband and her will-o-the whisp sister, back from foreign climes to “make a difference” in the kid’s life.
But it’s not just in the writing: Leigh Silverman’s direction is subtle and nuanced and extremely precise.
Oh, man, I lurved it. Go see it. It’s good.
Week o' Theater: God's Ear, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Two Men Talking
Ah, what a fabulous city I live in, what a fabulous line of work I’ve chosen: 3 great plays, 1 great week.
God’s Ear: Ordinarily, a play about parents grieving for their dead son while struggling through layers and layers of repetitive, endless dysfunction would have been too heavy for me to enjoy. However, the plot was fairly lost on me because the play was very non-linear and 90 degree angle sleek, where my emotions need slightly more linear, over-stuffed softness to be truly engaged. Stripped of emotional entanglements, I could concentrate on the language of the play, and its cadences and puns and lists of cliches were mezmorizing.
Days later, I found myself talking in the rhythm of God’s Ear.
Cat on a Hot Tin Roof: A great night of theater, with legendary actors speaking legendary words. I saw the movie with Paul Newman, and this production, which was Tennessee Williams’ original play, was much better than the censored version.
Two Men Talking: Just 2 men on a stage, talking about their own lives growing up in South Africa, their coincidental reunion as adults in New York City, and their deep friendship. There’s heaviness here because one of them is HIV+, but the overall tone is light. It’s less theater and more pure storytelling, with no set design and an ever-changing script.
The whole genre of storytelling has always appealed to me on a primitive level. If I focus just so, I can pretend I’m some cavewoman sitting around a fire, listening to a story about the big hunt.
God's Ear
We saw God’s Ear by Jenny Schwartz the other night at The Vineyard Theatre. It’s such an interesting show, but not one that will speak to everyone. It’s funny, when our little group walked out, I was the only one who didn’t say, “Oh my God, I loved it!,” and it took me a while to figure out why. Here’s what I came up with:
I left the theater feeling exactly as the playwright intended: very sad, anxious, angry, a little frightened. Then, as I thought back, I remembered all the moments I really loved (when a little girl morphs into her adult self with a gesture and a piece of wardrobe, when another character disappears–literally–down a rabbit hole, Gibson Frazier’s face as his character watches his wife implode and the Tooth Fairy and GI Joe remembering the good memories for a grieving couple when they just can’t do it themselves.) Did I enjoy it? Well, I did in retrospect, obviously, but I think it’s more accurate to say I appreciated it, both during and after.
Chip was completely enamored of what he calls the “parallel language” that Schwartz has created. I wonder if she herself had the meta dialogue in her mind as she wrote. Even now, as I recall the piece, I’m struck her cleverness in forcing me to articulate my own questions and answers to the scripts endless repetitions and seemingly nonsensical dialogue.
Should you go see it? Well, if you enjoy experiencing language crafted by someone who obviously loves manipulating it–and has great skill–you owe it yourself to see God’s Ear. It’s good theatre.
Blogger outreach
We did a blogger outreach this weekend for Almost an Evening. 150 bloggers got the fancy invite and we waited while bloggers responded. It was the biggest repsponse we’ve ever recieved for a show! Maybe it was Ethan Coen? Maybe it was the all-star cast? Or maybe it sounded short…?
Here is one from Blog Critics:
Edward Albee and My American Dream
Laurie, Jaisen, Tim, Kevin and I went to see The American Dream and The Sandbox (written and directed by Edward Albee) at a benefit performance and after party for The Cherry Lane Theatre. I am so proud to be working with this wonderful theatre. It was my birthday, and I can’t think of a better way to spend it than rubbing elbows with Edward Albee, Tamara Tunie, Judith Ivey and seeing this remarkable show.
Here are the highlights:
- The show is awesome. It’s an absurdist take on family, aging in a modern world and personal satisfcation. The cast was amazing, especially Judith Ivey, who was impeccable as Mommy. More on Judith later. I must mention that the boys in the show are total eye candy.
- Janio gave me a Plumber’s wrench for my birthday. Yeah….
- Donna Walker-Kuhne is a TWIN just like me!
- Got to spend some serious time with the unbeliveably talented Katori Hall (Hoodoo Love).
- Tamara Tunie is as nice as she is beautiful.
- Time for more Judith! I got to chat her for like 5 minutes (until a long-haired gentleman who is wayyyy gayer than me interrupted and squealed “Dame Judith Ivey, my love!” then he bowed and kissed her hand. I’m only mad because I should have done that.) We are going to be working with her on Vanities The Musical (coming Broadway this Fall). She is so busy! Directing Soccer Mom to this, then she’s starring as ANN LANDERS in The Lady with All the Answers at Northlight (Chicago, baby!!!) then straight to Pasadena for Vanities, then to Broadway in August. I just love her! I wish she was my Aunt so that I can call her My Favorite Aunt Judy! (No offense, Favorite Aunt Darla.)
Except for having Edward Albee sing ‘Happy Birthday’ to me, I got everything I wanted!
Thanks, Cherry Lane!
Tamara Tunie, Billie Allen and the Always Best Dressed James King


