Fear in the Western World (Target Margin Theater)

Gun violence is the focus in the wildly experimental digital puppetry show, Fear in the Western World.  A couple and their daughter are looking for a new home.  They find one in Nesthaven, a gated community.  There are lots of problems outside.  A community website posts about the dangers.  At one point, we hear they’ve “got to build taller fences around Nesthaven.”

David Commander and Rob Ramirez have created this surrealistic horror movie laced with dark sarcasm, bizarre humor, American cultural references and nods to Greek mythology.  Three screens are used to project the puppet action being performed.  At first, they reflect the homes of the community.  The audience is then taken for a deep dive into the depths of this home and the darkness which lies within.

The time period is not firmly established (which may be intentional).  The home contains an amusing vending machine which shows digital images of both food and guns.  Many different guns are pictured as commentary on our society.  An odd scene transpires where food is belched out of the machine and consumed.  Images of Alex Jones and Info Wars are projected.  Through a pair of dahlia-covered glasses, the gardens look beautiful.  Looking outside the windows, however, suggests a bleak and gray landscape.  Is this a near future like tomorrow or a hundred years from now?

Daughter Missy is in trouble.  An intruder is in the house.  Dad grabs his gun and shoots.  Missy get shot.  Her worry?  “Is Dad mad at me?”  I assumed that was for being shot accidentally.  What is in this house, anyway?  The family decides to explore the eerie catacombs to find out.

The design of this show is very interesting.  The puppets are bodies with cell phone faces.  The actors use handheld devices to make their mouths move as lines are recited.  Small cameras project the action onto the large screens from small sets and props.  The set pieces are manually adjusted by the performers to dismantle rooms to make hallways which move the plot along.  The lighting design (Takaaki Ando) of the catacombs was particularly effective.

David Commander has written and directed Fear in the Western World.  He is also one of the three performers, along with Maria Camia and a drolly hilarious Nikki Calonge as the wife.  The three have a lot of physical work to do in addition to storytelling.  That gets in the way of continuity somewhat – a few extra hands moving walls might make scene changes less frantic.

There is an impressive amount of digital technology on display.  While the show is experimental and somewhat clunky in execution, the elements assembled suggest what futuristic theatrical presentations may become.  For Fear in the Western World to achieve its ambitious goals, however, the more mundane task of telling a story needs clarity and focus.

Too many disparate ideas are tossed into this one hour show.  A self-described “loose adaptation” of Phineas from Greek mythology appears and says, “God blinded me and made me homeless.”  Dad notes, “lucky for you, I’m a good guy with a gun.”  Trayvon Martin and other gun violence victim names are tossed into the atmosphere.  Marauding birds appear.  Everything comes together as a slapdash entertainment.

Immediate Medium produced this piece.  They describe themselves as “an anti-disciplinary artist collective committed to the creation of works that challenge formal distinctions between performance, dance, film and visual art.”  Co-presented by the Exponential Festival, the participants in this multi-artist, multi-venue January festival are committed to “ecstatic creativity in the face of commercialism.”

Creativity abounds in this production of Fear in the Western World.  A tighter grip on storytelling might make the show more commercial but, then again, it also might make it more enjoyable.

Fear in the Western World will be performed through January 19, 2020 at the Target Margin Theater in Sunset Park, Brooklyn.

www.targetmargin.org

Podcast Episode 26

Podcast Episode 26 is now live.  Pick your favorite service through these links:  iTunes  Spotify  Stitcher  Google Podcast or by clicking the Buzzsprout link below.

This podcast is a monthly recap from TheaterReviewsFromMySeat covering plays, musicals and other performances.  This month’s episode includes a number of holiday themed offerings including multiple variations on A Christmas Carol.  From Harlem to Campbell Scott’s Broadway turn as Scrooge.  A presentation from the Czechoslovak American Marionette Theatre.  A two person version told in a Greenwich Village mansion.  On the lighter side, I discuss the touring show created by RuPaul’s Drag Race superstars BenDeLaCreme and Jinkx Monsoon called All I Want For Christmas is Attention.

Off-Broadway plays include a revival of Horton Foote’s Pulitzer Prize winning play The Young Man From Atlanta and Luke Kirby (Lenny Bruce in The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel) in 1937’s rarely revived Judgment Day.

Plus, a conversation with the playwright and director for the upcoming premiere of Soul Survivor set to begin performances on January 16th at The Players Theater in Greenwich Village.

I hope you enjoy the December 2019 Podcast.  Comments and suggestions are always welcome.  Please send any thoughts to this email: theaterreviewsfrommyseat@comcast.net.

theaterreviewsfrommyseat/episode26podcast

theaterreviewsfrommyseat/episode25podcast

Slava’s Snowshow

For the past few years, there has been a blizzard of stories centered on Russian influence on the American presidential election in 2016.  The ability to see those events as fact or fiction seems to depend on where you reside politically.  Or, perhaps, your ability to wear blinders and feign ignorance.  For this holiday season, a much more pleasant Russian diversion has once again invaded New York City.  Slava’s Snowshow is definitely designed with children in mind.  Adults who carry with them an abundance of whimsy and a healthy respect for childlike wonder will find much to enjoy in this visual feast.

This gentle spectacle is filled with melancholy clowns.  They wear bulbous red noses and caps with huge ear flaps.  One of them is Yellow (Artem Zhimo, in the performance I saw).  This Ronald McDonald cousin registers as especially emotional while equally portraying the jester.  He is surrounded by a gaggle of Greens who interact with him in all sorts of amusing and entertaining scenes.

The Main Green clown (Georgiy Deliyev) stands behind Yellow pantomiming his every step.  How do you know this clowning is working?  A young person in the audience shouts out, “he’s behind you.”  The children are the reviewers for this show.  I would have to agree with their conclusion.  The show is a hit.

First seen in 2004 in Union Square, Slava’s Snowshow returned for a Broadway outing in 2008.  That production received a Tony nomination for Best  Special Theatrical Event, a category which comes and goes.  Slava Polunin first created and staged this piece in 1993 basing it on the Yellow character he had been performing.

Countless props are used by these clowns to delight the audience with their silly antics.  Moments vary from very small sad clown vignettes to mind-blowingly large, full theater immersive spectacle.  The creativity is boundless.  I cannot say that I love clowns.  Many people seem to hate them and they should probably stay away.  I can say, however, that I embraced the spirit of this production and the heartwarmingly positive energy which could be felt in the theater.  Belly laughs rang out when something hit a person’s funny bone.

One of the most memorable scenes for me was a magical one involving a boat and the ocean.  A bed transforms into a ship with a sail held up by a broom.  Music from Chariots of Fire is played.  Danger lurks when a larger ship ventures nearby.  A clown falls overboard and needs to be rescued.  Oh no, there is a clown shark with a dorsal fin circling in the water.  My mind saw a lesson for children (and a reminder to adults) about the power of imagination.  An endless supply of play can come alive by using everyday things.  Noises backstage ingeniously suggest a “real” world outside.  Slava’s Snowshow is certainly about the magic of playtime.

This show is not simply a bit of inspired clowning, though.  There are a number of BIG, well-executed scenes.  Some trap the audience into this world.  Others redefine the term blizzard and are unforgettably amazing visuals.  Those elements made this show justifiably famous.  They explain why this entertainment is still touring the world twenty five years after its creation.

Little moments, however, charm as only the best clowns can do.  A small vignette near the end has a clown sitting on a table and chair which are slanted sideways.  You know the pratfall will happen.  When it does, you laugh.  You know it’s going to happen again.  When it does, you laugh harder.  For those whose inclinations lean toward embracing this type of playful silliness, Slava’s Snowshow is a wordless joy.

Slava’s Snowshow is being performed at the Stephen Sondheim Theatre until January 5th with an obviously large clean up crew.

www.slavasnowshow.com

www.slavaonbroadway

UP CLOSE Festival (New Ohio Theatre)

An Archive Apprentice directs you to a door.  A special knock and Pizza Rat appears.  As you descend the stairs, a scientist is listening to the wall through a metal can.  We will find out about that later.  A few instructions are provided (please add one about the uneven floor).  The small group enters a 360° immersive environment.  The UP CLOSE Festival encourages interaction and participation for its target audience, namely five year old children and up.

The start of this entertainment is slow and people mill about noticeably confused as to where to go and what to do.  There are cast members who communicate ideas such as separating sound bottles into categories which are good and bad.  There is a chessboard on the floor.  Bodega Cat is teaching the game of dominoes.  In the performance I attended, the adult to children ratio was not ideal so the awkwardness loomed large.

After an excessive amount of time, Pizza Rat (Marisol Rosa-Shapiro, delightful) introduces herself and welcomes everyone to the Ark.  The New Ohio Theatre is housed in a building which had previously been an archive.  “Memories of old New York live in here.”  Those thoughts, she informs, live in artifacts, walls and the magic that each of us brings.

In its second year, the idea for the festival is to bring the spirit of famed Greenwich Village activist Jane Jacobs to the theater.  (She led the fight to save Washington Square Park amidst a proposed superhighway development.  Her history should have been further explained if she is the inspirational centerpiece of this exercise.) The structure of this production is designed to present short form, immersive works which honor the neighborhood’s past.  The results are decidedly mixed.

Sanctuary/Garden begins as a sit down circle reminiscent of a kindergarten classroom.  The storytelling begins with tales of the Lenape natives who populated this area.  Three volunteers will stand and pretend to be corn, squash and beans.  A tree “sees” the changes in the city over the years.  This massive development is shown via a paper puppet projection.  All of a sudden it’s 1987,  people are getting sick and we don’t know why.

This section has a feeling reminiscent of the old television series, The Magic Garden.  Concepts are very basic and quickly presented.  The ideal target age seems less than five.  Then the AIDS crisis is referenced which surely is part of the neighborhood’s history.  With no context or elaboration, that tidbit likely flies over the children’s heads and the next short vignette begins.  Why was it mentioned?

219 Thompson Street is based on a locally famous chess war.  Two owners had competing stores across the street from the other.  One was a former protege. Then, all of a sudden, Sylvia Rivera, the founding member of the Gay Liberation Front is referenced in passing.  Why?  Volunteers in hats demonstrate chess moves.  The performers in this section were fun and over-the-top in their boisterousness.  Their efforts did not hide, however, that it was hard to discern the story being told and, more importantly, why it was told.

The most successful short work is the final piece, The Society of Historic Sonic Happenings written and directed by Adrienne Kapstein.  Until 1966, the experimental wing of Bell Labs was generating ideas in a building nearby.  Five scientists dedicated to lost, hidden and forgotten sounds take us through a journey to “hear” the neighborhood’s past.  This section is a nicely orchestrated combination of whimsical and focused.

Five performers introduce the sound capturing concepts and the immersive (and enjoyable) game we are about to play.  Each of them created individual characters and personalities.  I was happily assigned to Theo’s group.  Akash Seeramreddi gleefully portrayed the over-excited intern type and was quite fun with his unbridled enthusiasm.  Many adults do not participate as small groups play the game.  I understand this show is designed for kids but some interaction with that large, discarded group seems necessary.

Finally, Pizza Rat gets everyone back together again.  We are asked to name our favorite pizza.  A woman near me yelled, “Hawaiian.”  A cast member remarked, “that’s the one with pineapple,” and noted, “that’s a bit controversial.”  I laughed.  The UP CLOSE Festival could use more moments like that little surprise to be engaging.

The idea to celebrate a neighborhood’s fascinating and colorful past is a great one.  Oral traditions and interactive storytelling can be informative and instructive.  At one point a scientist tells us that the Bell Labs team invented transistors.  No explanation is provided.  In a show designed for children, too many historical factoids zing past.  In its execution, the thematic purpose of this show is too muddled to be recommended.

The UP CLOSE Festival will be performed at the New Ohio Theater through January 4, 2019.

www.newohiotheatre.org

The Thin Place (Playwrights Horizons)

A couple of years ago, playwright Lucas Hnath and Director Les Waters were working on a play called Dana H.  (That one is coming to New York in February at the Vineyard Theatre.)  During a conversation, Mr. Waters observed “well, it’s as if we’ve gone into a thin place at this point in the story.”  Mr. Hnath asked, “What’s The Thin Place?”  The response:  “oh you know, it’s the place where the line between this world and some other world is very thin.”

This tremendously talented playwright jotted down “The Thin Place” on a scrap of paper thinking it would be a good title for a play.  He “didn’t know what would happen in it; I just thought I’d like to write that play.”  In the program notes, he advises his audience, “the less you know, the better.”  That is true.

The stage is essentially bare with two comfortable chairs and a small table between them.  Hilda is sitting with a mug of tea.  She tells a story about her childhood and her love for her grandmother.  They practiced psychic mind games.  Grandma wanted to be able to communicate from the beyond in one of those thin places between our world and wherever the next world is.

In an excellent tight-lipped, anxiety-filled yet loosely modulated performance, Emily Cass McDonnell begins our journey to the supernatural.  She is a big fan of Linda (Randy Danson) who is a famous medium who communicates with the dead.  Emily has yet to connect with her grandmother. That’s the premise which begins this multi-dimensional tale filled with thoughtful ideas and structural twists and turns.  The Thin Place is, once again, another outstanding play from Lucas Hnath.

The relationship between these two individuals develop.  Belief systems are considered and challenged.  Two other characters  appear in the middle of the play (Kelly McAndrew and Triney Sandoval).  A party atmosphere is punctuated by wine and conversation.  Linda is working for a politician who does not connect with his constituents.  She is giving him her techniques as a spiritual adviser.  Is that moral to help someone insinuate themselves through mind control tricks?

The final section of the play is equally fascinating all the way until the final word is spoken.  This tale has so many layers.  The eeriness of a ghost story.  The sadness of a child’s relationship with a mother who felt possessed by evil spirits.  The inherent cynicism of human beings.  Powerful belief foundations.  Like his play, The Christians, Mr. Hnath sees complexity in his character’s motivations and thoughts.  This isn’t simply a play about the thin place between life and the afterlife.

Our brains and the thin place between ambiguity and observational fact is the space explored so effectively here.  Think about a creepy movie or personal experience.  Was that the wind or something more dangerous?  How our minds interpret information will come into play as an observer of this production.  An incredibly entertaining and original play, The Thin Place demands discussion afterward.

Les Waters’ direction is simple and his actors beautifully travel through the various moods and structural adjustments in this absorbing work.  The lighting design by Mark Barton is puzzling at first but becomes abundantly clear as the play progresses.  This is an unique production which stimulates the senses and feels wholly original.  The silence is as powerful as the noise.  How will your brain fill in those moments as you ponder this story and its unfolding?

This is my fifth time admiring a play written by Lucas Hnath.  Every one of them is excellent and highly recommended from Off-Broadway’s The Christians and Red Speedo to the two Broadway outings, Hillary and Clinton, and A Doll’s House, Part 2.  In our current golden age of drama, I expect this storyteller and his works will stand tall on the list of best plays from the early 21st Century period.

The Thin Place has been extended through January 26, 2020 at Playwrights Horizons.

www.playwrightshorizons.org

theaterreviewsfrommyseat/hillaryandclinton

theaterreviewsfrommyseat/adollshousepart2

Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol – A Play With Music

My fourth trip this month to the world of Ebenezer Scrooge shows just how monumentally important this story is to our culture.  Sure, How The Grinch Stole Christmas and Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer are indelible holiday entertainments.  On a more human scale, however, this morality tale resonates powerfully when read or given a fine production.  Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol – A Play With Music is a stunning achievement which masterfully makes the author’s words come to vivid life.

This show is being performed on a tour of historical landmarks.  The performance I saw was held at the Al Hirschfeld Gallery in the Mansion/Museum owned by Margo Feiden.  An optional buffet dinner complete with delicious mince pies preceded the show.  Exploring this historic house built in 1845 was a special treat filled with Mr. Hirschfeld’s wonderful works of art.

The setting was the house’s ballroom added in 1899.  Ms. Feiden introduced the play and the performers in her home.  She imagined that when Mr. Dickens visited New York, he  likely would have stopped into this prominent household.  He did indeed make a second trip to New York City in 1868.  That is an interesting ghost story to accompany a famous ghost story.

Jeffries Thaiss and Eric Scott Anthony co-conceived and wrote this version.  Mr. Thaiss plays The Actor and Mr. Anthony is The Musician.  The presentation is a 75 minute two man show.  The feeling is one of a book blossoming into three dimensional life.  Words are faithful to Dickens’ text.  Scenes which do not appear in typical productions here provide memorable moments.

One such scene is where Scrooge visits a ship with the Ghost of Christmas Present.  Two bar stool type chairs represent the entire set.  When Scrooge is floating above the sailors, Mr. Thaiss places the two chairs together and stands high on them.  The visual, combined with the prose, is transporting.  This is A Christmas Carol performed with the words as the star and The Actor as the brilliant communicator.

Mr. Thaiss plays every part in this show.  His many voices and facial manipulations make each characterization clear.  He flips from stool to stool when in conversation.  Does he believe that his former business partner really came to visit him from the afterlife?  After all, Scrooge says, “you may be an undigested piece of beef,” a classic quote from the original tale.

In his performance, I saw Zachary Quinto, David Bowie and also a close friend of mine which enhanced my enjoyment of Mr. Thaiss’ exceptional physicality and, importantly, his ability to capture my attention.  Having seen this tale four times this month, I was concerned about repetition.  This one was the most complete version.  Furthermore, I appreciated the included section about social injustice describing the boy’s ignorance and the girl’s want.  Sitting in a mansion with less than twenty people nicely punctuated that particular moment.

Mr. Anthony ably supported this performance as The Musician.  He strums the guitar adding a score to the storytelling.  He makes terrific sound effects to embellish the action.  There is a playfulness between these two performers that keeps the mood light and fun.  He also adds Christmas carols to the show.  At one point, he sings “Oh Holy Night.”  The rendition is beautiful.

When I was listening to that song sitting comfortably on a couch in a historical Greenwich Village mansion, I heard the last line as if for the first time.  “Oh night divine!”  This version of A Christmas Carol is well worth seeking out.  Scrooge asks the Ghost of Christmas Yet To Come, “Why show me this if I’m past all hope?”   Because we all need a little reminder now and again about goodness, generosity and the true spirit of Christmas in this crazy world in which we live.

The next two performances of Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol – A Play With Music will be performed on December 29th in an 1837 Greek revival building on Staten Island.

www.achristmascarolplaywithmusic.com

A Christmas Carol, Oy! Hanukkah, Merry Kwanzaa, Happy Ramadan (CAMT)

If you’ve seen Drunk History on television you will understand the vibe of this show.  Imagine you have an elderly uncle who is of Czech descent.  He has a marvelous collection of marionettes.  After a few shots of Becherovka he invites the family down into the basement for an impromptu retelling (and updating) of a Christmas classic.  That is the best way to describe A Christmas Carol, Oy! Hanukkah, Merry Kwanzaa, Happy Ramadan.

I visited Prague in 2018 and saw Don Giovanni at the National Marionette Theatre.  The art form is centuries old.  As the program notes, the typical puppeteering family owned a portable theater including a stage and about twenty marionettes.  The four primary backdrops would be a room, a village, a royal castle and a forest.  They would transport these materials from one venue to the next on wheelbarrow.  Seeing a live version of this history is certainly fascinating to experience.

One performer would produce all of the voices and be the main puppet operator.  That is the format followed in this production.  Vít Horejš founded the Czechoslovak-American Marionette Theatre in 1990 using two-century old puppets which he found in the Jan Hus Church on East 74th Street.  For the Bob Cratchit character, he uses a puppet from his mother’s identical set that he played with as a child.  The backstory of this production is rich with memories of Old World traditions.

As the title suggests, however, New World inclusiveness is the attempted update in this holiday offering.  Lyrics in the opening song, “We Wish You a Merry Christmas” are rewritten to celebrate other faiths and cultures.  The idea of opening up Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol to be religiously diverse is inspired.  Mr. Horejš even makes jokes about his update.  During a dreidel scene he remarks “you have to save that multi-cultural holiday stuff” for”centuries later.”

Tongue in cheek line deliveries and self-aware humor fill this show winningly.  Scrooge’s nephew Fred is wearing a fashionable outfit and repeatedly proclaims, “don’t you just love it?”  Marley is represented by a cleverly designed chain puppet.  During an interchange with Scrooge, he admonishes “I didn’t come from the grave to argue over tenses.”

The marionettes are made by Miloš Kasal, Václav Krcál and “unknown Czech folk artists.”  As a result, certain cast members fill in as best they can.  Twins in the Cratchit house have beards.  Their mother tells them to take them off.  “We can’t,” they say, since they are made out of porcelain.  Good spirited quirkiness is evident throughout the show.

Politics play a role as well.  Dickens’ tale is famously reflective about the society he observed.  Today, Mr. Horejš notes, “being poor is not ‘in’ anymore.”  He elaborates: “what’s wrong with bundling up some subprime mortgages?”  Or “building hotels and casinos and defaulting on the loans?”  Bah Humbug!

The idea for this show is terrific but the execution is wanting.  Two women assist filling in the gaps with holiday songs sung in Czech, English, Hebrew, Slovak, Spanish and Swahili.  Valois Mickens and Katarina Vizina are fun sidekicks.  Everything moves too slowly, however, from set changes to dialogue.  Admiration falls by the wayside and the experience becomes a bit of a slog to endure.

In the basement space of Theater for the New City, there is a strong sense of being with your Czech uncle on Christmas Eve.  He brings out his toys and ad libs this renowned story.  Since your family is now more diverse, he throws in other references to be more inclusive.  Hanukkah is far more represented, however, than Kwanzaa and Ramadan, despite relatively equal billing in the title.  This inexpensive and unique diversion will definitely take you back in time to a theatrical history that is remarkably still alive.

A Christmas Carol, Oy! Hanukkah, Merry Kwanzaa, Happy Ramandan will be performed at the Theater for the New City until January 5, 2020.

www.theaterforthenewcity.net

www.czechmarionettes.org

theaterreviewsfrommyseat/dongiovanni/prague

A Christmas Carol

Hundreds of lanterns are hung throughout the entire Lyceum Theatre for this production of A Christmas Carol.  Jack Thorne (Harry Potter and the Cursed Child) has adapted Charles Dickens’ holiday staple and those lights will be needed to guide the audience through the darkness.  This tale of Ebenezer Scrooge is bleak (in a good way) and ultimately redemptive, if a trifle overbaked.

Campbell Scott is a wonderful Scrooge, full of anger and greed.  The clever set design by Rob Howell has boxes submerged in the floor.  When pulled out, they stack and create furniture but also represent the safe deposit boxes in which to hoard money.  Scrooge believes that “taking on a debt is a kindness.”  At his own funeral, Scrooge sees his nephew Fred (Brandon Gill) remarking “my uncle was unable to find joy in the most basic of things.”  He adds a disarming coda.  “He was a tragedy.”

This version of A Christmas Carol lays its darkness on heavily.  When redemption finally happens, the contrast is striking.  There is much to enjoy in this retelling staged by the inventive director Matthew Warchus (Matilda, The Norman Conquests, Boeing, Boeing).  There are head scratching misses, however, which detract from the story’s power.

Two excellent actresses, Andrea Martin and LaChanze, play the Ghosts of Christmas Past and Present.  Their performances are so oddball that they seem jokey.  LaChanze delivers hers in a Caribbean accent wearing sunglasses.  Any weight of drama is stripped away.  Chris Hoch’s Marley is uneventful except for the surfeit of chains.  Thankfully Mr. Scott is grounded and effective watching the scenes unfolding in front of his eyes.

There are genuinely touching moments such as a view into Young Ebenezer’s boyhood (Dan Piering) playing with toys.  His late in life visit to Belle is a triumphant expression of raw emotions.  Sarah Hunt is magnificent in the part of the girlfriend who got away.  Tears visibly stream off her face as the two reflect on their pasts and presents.  Audience members could be heard sniffling.  It is one of the finest scenes on Broadway this year.

Other particularly positive aspects of this production are the performances of Dashiell Eaves as Bob Cratchit and Rachel Prather as Scrooge’s sister, Little Fan.  She doubles as the guide through Christmas Future in the far better second act.  The celebration of the spirit of Christmas is gloriously realized in an audience participation preparation of the feast.  That creative idea goes on way too long, however, and it becomes awkward to watch the forced frivolity.

The nice touches and quieter moments are where this production makes its mark.  There are multiple times the cast performs Christmas carols on hand-held bells.  That effect grounds this tale in the past and is sweetly nostalgic.  The set offers a bunch of surprises.  Other than the hideous ghost outfits of patchwork, the costumes are transportive.

At the end of the day, A Christmas Carol must have a great Scrooge to be successful.  Campbell Scott delivers that performance.  His transformation to joy is effectively realized and shocking from what came before.  This version has some flaws for sure but can be recommend for an abundance of creative innovation and visual flourishes.  The ghosts matter less in this retelling.  That makes the living and breathing among us even more important to consider.  Who wants to hear “he was a tragedy” at their own funeral?

A Christmas Carol is running through January 5, 2020.

www.achristmascarol.com

Judgment Day (Park Avenue Armory)

In 1937, the Nazi Party was already in power.  Hitler had reoccupied the Rhineland and broken the Treaty of Versailles.  The Luftwaffe had been formed.  Jews were banned from the military.  The Nuremburg Laws had already gone into effect.  In this environment German playwright Ödön von Horváth wrote Judgment Day.

The setting is a train station in a very small village somewhere in the Austro-Hungarian Empire.  The time is 1933.  The local stationmaster, Herr Hudetz, rigorously runs this station like clockwork.  A terrible accident occurs leading to the death of eighteen people.  The play quickly gets to this event.  What follows is an expose on mob mentality.  The timeliness of this revival is evident.

The townspeople are nasty gossips.  Rumors get started and become facts.  The flirtatious innkeeper’s daughter Anna tells Hudetz, “They say you’re not a man.”  He asks, “Who says that?”  She replies, “The whole town.”  Hudetz lives on the upper floor of the station with his wife.  She is thirteen years older and appears to be a jealous, barking shrew.

Frau Liemgruber is waiting for a train which is 45 minutes late.  She has a conversation with a salesman.  “I hate people,” she says.  He understands.  “For all I care,” she adds, “the whole town could drop dead.”  The mood of this play is bitter and angry.  As a result, the dialogue is dark and the people are largely unlikable.  They cast aspersions.  They pass judgments.

After the tragedy, the stationmaster admits that he doesn’t want to live anymore.  “I still hear the screams.”  Anna offers a suggestion.  “Maybe you have to do something worse so that you will be punished.”  Citizens of this town are fickle.  They defend, support and love one minute and cruelly discard and condemn the next.  Like many of the mobs in America today, all of this judgment occurs without facts.  Even when things are briefly going well, the barmaid has some sage advice.  “Don’t be too noble or people will turn on you again.”

The play itself is excellent.  Mr. von Horváth created a fascinating tale of guilt and a harsh criticism of his contemporaries.  This production is housed in the cavernous Park Avenue Armory.  Paul Steinberg’s sets are nothing short of gigantic, fashioned out of plywood.  They are moved around the room with giant lifts.  Scene changes are cumbersome and sap all energy from the room.  Occasionally, cast members run around the movement to enact mob mentality, to distract attention or to kill time depending on your judgment.

The lighting design by Mimi Jordan Sherin is sensational, however.  Trains whiz by.  The night sky ominously frames the giant trees.  Shadows portend danger.  Unfortunately, the direction by Richard Jones (The Hairy Ape) is very uneven.  This little play is lost amidst the need to fill the voluminous space.

What’s even worse is the lack of consistency in the actor’s presentations.  The barmaid (Jeena Yi) is oddly contemporary.  Luke Kirby (Emmy Winner for The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel) plays the stationmaster in a rigidly precise way.  I enjoyed the performance immensely but the style contrasted so obviously with everyone else, especially his freewheeling wife Frau Hudetz (a fine Alyssa Bresnahan).  Her unpopular brother Alfons is played by Henry Stram and his discomfort and acquiescence registers beautifully.

Harriet Harris (Thoroughly Modern Millie) nailed the tone perfectly as Frau Liemgruber, the town’s busiest of busybodies.  Her scathing tongue is utterly detestable.  Perfecting the group think mentality and using gossip to entertain herself and destroy others is her pastime.  I did not feel the same way about Anna, the flirty girl at the center of the story.  Susannah Perkins conveyed pretty and desirable.  She did not, however, convincingly project a woman that is manipulative enough to justify her actions.

Judgment Day is a very fine play.  With a critical eye, Ödön von Horváth sheds a bold spotlight on the culpability of a village.  Maybe in another one hundred years the world will understand how the culpability of a now morally bankrupt Republican Party will be judged.  As I write this, the House of Representatives is voting on impeachment.  Let’s watch the mobs and remain bemused.

www.armoryonpark.org

All I Want For Christmas is Attention

BenDeLaCreme and Jinkx Monsoon are two personalities who emerged from the Ru Paul’s Drag Race juggernaut.  Jinkx was the winner of season five.  DeLa is the only performer to have won five maxi challenges in a single season and also to have won Snatch Game twice.  If you know what that means, those are significant accomplishments.  If you don’t, it probably sounds idiotic.  It is – in the best way – which is why the Emmy Awards are piling up.  This holiday season they are touring in All I Want For Christmas is Attention.

As they will inform, “everyone is traumatized by Christmas.”  In this singing, dancing, comedy burlesque, these two very talented performers will focus on the negative about Christmas “rather than the fictitious.”  They ask serious questions such as “what the hell is wassailing?”  Both are very funny and the many costumes are sparkling or witty, or both.

The persona of Jinkx Monsoon is that of a substance addled boozer.  From a poor background, Christmas was never the one she saw on television.  They take Lorde’s song “Royal” and turn it into “Spoiled” to express their frustrations.  Jinkx’s grandmother passed down a recipe which “wound up being the number for the local Domino’s.”

At the other end of the spectrum is the self-described “terminally delightful” BenDeLaCreme.  In an interview, Benjamin Putnam said that he considers drag to be “an inherently political act.”  He views it as an opportunity to encourage people to think about complex issues related to gender and sexuality through humor and theater.  Adding religion to that outlook is the concoction these two co-creators have put into the punch bowl.

BenDeLa holds a glass and sings “when you wish upon a nog.”  The eggnog becomes the vehicle by which his dead Nana communicates from the beyond.  His childhood Christmas memories are happier ones than those of Jinkx.  In one of a number of well-done video clips, DeLa sits in front of a fireplace and shares her ideas for “festitaining.”

In the best drag shows, edgier fare shines brightest.  There is some mild blue humor sprinkled in for giggles.  Regarding Pfferernusse: “you can really taste the P.”  Neither performer’s character is too raunchy though.  The humor is much smarter than that.  When DeLa tells the story of Jesus, he starts with “Mary was just virgining around.”  She postulates the immaculate conception as potentially predatory by God.  What holiday song best fits this interpretation?  “Mary, it’s Cold Outside” is the hilarious answer.

Both make a few points about our culture of Christmas and the excess of consumption.  “Let’s not kill the Earth to celebrate Christ.”  I had forgotten that the classic holiday film White Christmas contained a Minstrel Show.  With their tongues planted firmly in cheek, a theory emerges.  Could it be that every religion is a cult?

The joyously silly All I Want for Christmas is Attention is a deftly conceived and professionally executed entertainment.  This show is for people who can embrace the spirit, see the hypocrisy and have a sense of humor.  If you are game, “cross your chest” and “shake your hips” because “everybody’s doing the Nativity Twist.”

All I Want For Christmas is running is various cities through December 29, 2019.

www.jinkxanddela.com