Angels in America

My first encounter with Angels in America: A Gay Fantasia on National Themes, the masterwork by Tony Kushner, was the Signature Theater’s revival in 2010.  I have vivid memories of a hauntingly fragile yet regally tough Michael Urie as Prior Walter and Bill Heck’s completely realized closeted Mormon Joe Pitt.  An off-Broadway production, it was certainly more intimate than I imagine the original productions were.  Currently on Broadway is the big scale revival with Nathan Lane (The Producers, The Front Page) as Roy Cohn  and Andrew Garfield (Death of a Salesman) as Prior Walter.  On second viewing, the play is beyond grand in scope.  It is epic, bold, hilarious, aggressively theatrical, wildly overwritten, audacious, heartbreakingly tender and Shakespearean in scope.  Angels in America is a great play.

In the beginning (intentional religious symbolism inserted here), Prior Walter learns that he has AIDS and with his live in boyfriend they are facing the illness.  The year is 1985.  Thousands are dying of this disease and we are smack dab in the middle of Reagan era conservatism.  A Mormon couple from Salt Lake now live in New York; she is afraid to go outside, he is a closeted homosexual.  The famously evil lawyer Roy Cohn is a major character, dripping with venom.  The playing field of this play is immense and tackles politics, religion, love, intolerance, coping, revenge, sanity, health care, acceptance and forgiveness.

The two parts, Millenium Approaches and Perestroika, require seven and one half hours of commitment.  I did not opt to see both parts in one day but instead saw them in the same week and I was happy with that choice.  I was riveted throughout as was the audience, even through some of kookier, more overwrought sections, notably in Perestroika.  Everyone in the cast is very good.  I particularly loved  Susan Brown.  She played a rabbi, a doctor, a mother, a homeless woman, amongst other roles.  Many characters inhabit multiple roles that this “fantasia” accommodates brilliantly.  James McArdle’s Louis and Nathan Stewart-Jarrett’s Belize were especially fine portrayals.

Whenever I revisit something that has an indelible imprint in memory, there are inevitable comparisons.  In this version, I felt that the Mormom wife Harper, played by Denise Gough (People, Places & Things), was too intensely crazed.  That choice played beautifully in the more fantastical sections but strained credulity (and focus) during the intimate scenes.  The whole production design, directed by Marianne Elliott (War Horse, The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time), was not my cup of tea.  There were definitely some terrific effects and scene changes.  A big “thing” (for lack of a better name) hovers over the stage throughout both parts.  When it finally is utilized, it’s a completely ho-hum moment.

Let’s not quibble too much though.  Angels in America is a classic piece of theater, standing the test of time.  It looks back at when we had oppression, intolerance, polarizing politics and religious fervor.  Maybe AIDS has been contained, but isn’t is amazing how far we have not come.  The angels and their humans, as imperfect as they may be, still require our utmost attention.  There is still more great work to be done.

www.angelsbroadway.com

theaterreviewsfrommyseat/peopleplacesthings

The Confession of Lily Dare (Theater for the New City)

Dear Jinkx Monsoon,

Last night I attended a new play by Charles Busch called The Confession of Lily Dare.  Yes, THAT Charles Busch, the one who grew from downtown drag phenom in theater successes such as Vampire Lesbians of Sodom to movies including Die Mommie Die! before the Tony Award nomination for writing The Tale of the Allergist’s Wife.  Last night I was at the Theater for the New City and caught his latest blend of imaginatively recreated classic movie magic and catnip camp.  Jinkx, I thought of you and wished you were here.

This play is right up your alley, an homage to tearjerker films of early 1930’s pre-code Hollywood such as The Sin of Madame Claudet and Madame X.  This play is set “against the gaudy tapestry of turn of the century California’s notorious Barbary Coast.”  (For the young’uns, that’s a turn at 1900 not 2000.)  Lily Dare, raised in a convent, becomes a famous chanteuse and later runs a string of brothels.  Her troublesome secret is the daughter she was forced to abandon after her husband was killed in the San Francisco earthquake of 1906.  Melodrama primed for hilarity.

This is high octane off-off Broadway with very talented actors and fabulous costumes by Rachel Townsend.  While the set design was fairytale-like and fun, all of the steps proved to be a large distraction as Mr. Busch nervously traversed them in heels.  He appeared inconsistently committed to the character of Lily.  Of course he writes funny lines and can carry a comedy but this performance felt low on energy.  Perhaps the superb cast around him shined so brightly, it was hard to compete?

Jinkx, why am I telling you all this?  I believe Lily Dare is your next triumph.  Yes, you are a famous singing drag performer and winner of season five of Ru Paul’s Drag Race.  But it’s your performance as Kitty Witless in The Vaudevillians that came to mind here.  Along with Dr. Dan Von Dandy, you were a famous vaudevillian couple frozen in an avalanche in the 1920s but were able to thaw out thanks to global warming.  And make us laugh, a lot, you did.

The Confession of Lily Dare has some fun material and Mr. Busch knows his way around campy melodrama.  Your acerbic wit could help elevate the uneven proceedings here.  You’ve already proven you are an old-time chanteuse.  Jinkx, if you choose this assignment, and you should, please keep the rest of the cast intact.  Nancy Anderson, Christopher Borg, Howard McGillin, Kendal Sparks and Jennifer Van Dyck were all outstanding.

www.theaterforthenewcity.net

www.jinkxmonsoon.com

The Review or How To Eat Your Opposition (WP Theater)

The second entry into WP Theater’s Pipeline Festival is The Review or How To Eat Your Opposition by Donnetta Lavinia Grays.  From the program notes, this play was written back in 2011 and has been now reworked during this collaborative developmental process.  While four actors performed with scripts in hand, the piece was given a solid staging so the author and director could assess their work in front of a live audience.

An known artist (January LaVoy) has done an installation in a football stadium which is described briefly.  The seats are covered with beer cans that have all the labels facing forward.  There are female blow up dolls in the aisles.  On the television screens, hardcore pornography is playing which is interspersed with Hooters ads.  At the beginning of this play, a blogger (Chalia La Tour) is typing up her negative review while her wife (Tia James) watches her beloved Giants on the television.  The review gets read by the artist.  When she and the blogger finally meet, sparks fly.

Revenge as a dish best served cold is the backbone of this play but this work is multi-limbed.  Relationships and betrayals percolate.  This playwright dives into many issues ranging from 9/11 to football/violence/war to the objectification of women to love, deceit and money in the art world.  All four actresses did a nice job delivering this material.  Tia James’ performance as the football-watching wife was particularly memorable.  Overall, there may be too many topical themes and plot advances covered by this earnest effort.  A little more backstory might help to flesh out these characters and their motivations to pull us in even more.

www.wptheater.org

Children of a Lesser God

Written by Mark Medoff, Children of a Lesser God opened on Broadway in 1980 and won the Tony Award for Best Play and for both of its lead actors, John Rubenstein and Phylis Frelich.  The  play was originally written for Ms. Frelich, a deaf actress, based on her relationship with her husband.  After a successful two year run it was turned into a movie, nominated for five Oscars including Best Picture, with Marlee Matlin winning a Best Actress Oscar.  Not having seen either, the pedigree of this story promised some acting fireworks in this new Broadway revival.

Joshua Jackson (Showtime’s The Affair) is James Leeds, a new teacher at a school for the deaf.  Lauren Ridloff is Sarah Norman, now a janitor at the school, having lived there since she was a young child.  He is idealistic and earnest about opening up the world to deaf people.  She is reluctant to speak or even read lips.  What follows is a complicated relationship about communication and individuality.  The play also includes some contrived subplots involving other students and thematic overload with an older hardened teacher and a do-gooder lawyer.  When the play centers its focus on the core relationship, Children of a Lesser God is at its best.

The scenic design is sharply cool; a blue landscape with orange accents that suggest a memory play travelling through doors of understanding and also doors of separation and isolation.  As the teacher, Mr. Jackson is rarely offstage.  He is our narrator here who simultaneously speaks lines while also signing and interpreting signing.  The performance is grounded, natural and completely real.  Ms. Norman is effectively emoting without speaking yet we still are able to hear her thoughts and try to grasp a deaf and mute life.  Why does she not want to cross the chasm and make connections to the speaking world?

Chemistry between these two central characters is critical here and both actors deliver on that promise.  Intellectually, I enjoyed this play as an opportunity to consider whether a deaf world is oppressed or just different.  Theatrically, I enjoyed watching the acting, particularly the leads, and their approach to delivering this challenging material.  Emotionally, however, I did not really get engaged so by the end, all of this fell a little flat for me.  A very good clinical and analytical study with some great acting roles but not exceptional enough to be considered a top tier play.

www.childrenofalessergodbroadway.com

Flight

At the McKittrick Hotel where Sleep No More has been ensconced for years, additional performance pieces are staged.  Last year there was a very entertaining barroom musical from the National Theater of Scotland called The Strange Undoing of Prudencia Hart.  Vox Motus, another Scottish company, created Flight whose ticket states that this is “a new form of theater.”  From their website:  “Ours is a theatre of story-telling visuals, transformational design, magic, comedy, music, physical performance, puppetry, multi-media and most importantly thrills.”  Performances for Flight take about an hour to experience and are scheduled in 45 minute increments.  Most importantly, is that enough time for thrills?

The answer is yes.  Flight is based on the book Hinterland by Caroline Brothers.  It tells the story of two orphaned children fleeing Afghanistan on foot to a better life.  The goal is London.  Ms. Brothers was a journalist and while her novel is fiction, all of the events portrayed are based on interviews.  As you might imagine, the journey is difficult and sometimes harrowing while often moving and hopeful.  Told in a documentary style, this tale brings you in to face the human drama underneath the politicized news cycle of these struggling people.

And face it you do, alone.  One at a time you are brought into this experience.  You are seated in a chair separated from others  by dividers and instructed to put headphones on.  What follows is a sort of large cyclindrical diorama which tells the story of Flight in miniature.  Small sections light up as the story progresses past your eyes, just for you at that moment, before moving to the next person.  The experience is quite unsettling (as intended) but beautifully rendered.  Dialogue, sound effects, dramatic visuals and lighting are well executed in support of the material.

Flight humanizes the horrific plight of refugees through an intimate story of two boys.  It also puts a mirror to humanity’s intolerance as we watch the bravery and determination of these children.  The unique and creative design used to tell this story elicited strong emotional reactions from me, including anger and despair.  All from a fantastic cyclindrical diorama and a pair of headphones.  Maybe the moniker “a new form of theater” is debatable but there’s no denying that Flight contains “thrills.”  The raft scenes alone are worth a visit.

www.mckittrickhotel.com

Yerma

Happily, I’m having some difficulty deciding the right words to describe Yerma.  Magnificently theatrical?  Ferociously intense?  Unforgettably riveting?  Perfection?  All these hosannas and many more apply to this fantastic play and this extraordinary production.

Yerma is based on a 1934 play written by Frederico Garcia Lorca.  It tells a tragic story of a woman living in rural Spain who is desperate to have children but is infertile in an age where she is expected to procreate.  Simon Stone has adapted this story, moved the characters to modern London and turned Yerma into a journalist.  As a character named Her, she is in her thirties.  Early on we learn that she now wants to have a child.  With brilliantly realistic yet highly dramatic words, the characters, their situations and interactions are fascinatingly complex.  Mr. Stone is also the Director of this masterpiece.

You walk into the theater and the audience is split into two sides.  Both face a wide rectangular glass box which is carpeted inside.  As the play unfolds, screens above announce a chapter and describe what’s to follow, such as “deception.”  Scene changes include a complete blackout and dissonant singing or music.  The scene changes are their own fascinating element.  Not only do they appear complicated to execute but the pauses add tension to the ever increasing levels of intensity in this story.  Lizzie Clachan did the ingenious, jaw-dropping set design.

Yerma had its world premiere at the Young Vic in London in 2016.  Playing Her, Billie Piper won every award available and she does not disappoint.  In Yerma, she has the role of her life in a performance of incalculable emotional depth and range.   For a month, this production has been mounted at the Park Avenue Armory.  Every actor on the stage is astonishingly superb, especially Brendan Cowell’s performance as John.

When Ms. Piper came out for her curtain call, she looked understandably exhausted.  The audience was so overwhelmed that it took a few moments for clapping to start.  At that moment, you realize your great fortune.   You were lucky enough to see one of the great ones.  Of this year and this decade, for sure.  One of the greats of the century?  A safe bet.  Of my lifetime?  Definitely.

www.armoryonpark.org

Galatea or Whatever You Be (WP Theater)

For five weeks WP Theater will present its Pipeline Festival featuring five new plays which have been in development during a collaborative two year lab residency.  The first effort this spring is Galatea or Whatever You Be.  Why the Shakespearean title?  This new play has been loosely adapted by MJ Kaufman from John Lily’s Elizabethan era Gallathea, written in 1585.

Remarkably still relevant, the subject matter concerns gender identification.  Every five years, a small village sacrifices the prettiest virgin to the god Neptune to protect themselves from ocean flooding.  (Also remarkably, climate issues figure into the plot.)  Two fathers worry that their daughters are likely candidates for this ritual.  Dressed as boys, they are sent to the woods until the sacrifice is over.  The two fall in love not knowing that they are girls.  Adding to the gender-bending merriment is the presence of Diana and her nymphs in the woods.  Cupid and Neptune get involved as well.  Back in the day, the boy actors playing girls who are pretending to be boys must have been quite the gag.

Galatea is a fun piece of work in its current form.  There could be more laughs with such an over-the-top story.  I would add that my first instinct leaving the theater is that this is prime material for a musical comedy.  The dance of the nymphs, for example.  Diana, nicely played by Eve Lindley, could definitely handle a show-stopping number, or three.  Bailey Roper’s portrayal of one of the two young lovers was my favorite performance.  Overall, a nice idea to adapt this great find.  I’m still thinking about Neptune’s entrance music though.

www.wptheater.org

The Lucky Ones (Ars Nova)

Last December I saw Abigail and Shaun Bengson’s magical and philosophical concert musical Hundred Days.  In my review of that autobiographical piece, I mentioned that Abigail referred to an unexplained family implosion when she was a teenager.  In The Lucky Ones, the couple has now opened up this story for the world to see.  As was the case for Hundred Days, this musical is raw, riveting, extraordinarily intimate and philosophical.  Working with their book cowriter Sarah Gancher, the Bengsons take us through Abigail’s childhood journey.

Eighteen performers play the family members and friends of this story.  The family is clearly a free thinking, NPR loving group.  Mom teaches at their self-created school and Dad tells the children to question everything.  On the surface, everyone is open and enlightened.  Underneath this idyllic liberal paradise, each person is naturally more human than that.  Ms. Bengson plays herself both as a younger version participating in the story and as the older one commenting on the events.  As a result, the story is enriched from family history to a personal reflective journey.  At one point, she is standing near the back of the stage but the anguish on her face was all I could see.

With The Lucky Ones, the Bengsons have broadened their storytelling to a larger cast.  Some scenes and characters are definitely more fully realized than others but the variety of stylistic and storytelling choices are interesting.  Director Anne Kauffman and Choreographer Sonya Tayeh once again give them a thoughtful, creative staging.  Most importantly, the music and lyrics often soar and superbly communicate the emotions of this tale.  A highly recommended exploration of the circuitous process that encompasses growing, healing and living.

Hundred Days is heading out on tour this year and is already booked for September at the La Jolla Playhouse.  Make an appointment with these magical musicians.  They are so talented, likable and unforgettably real.

www.arsnovanyc.com

www.hundreddays.org

theaterreviewsfrommyseat/hundreddays

Escape From Margaritaville

Walking into the Marquis Theatre with frozen margarita machines primed for consumption, I knew this jukebox assemblage of Jimmy Buffett songs was headed straight down the runway towards party time.  The shocking revelation was that Escape From Margaritaville made Mamma Mia! look like Shakespeare.  For today’s review, let’s follow Mr.  Buffett’s lead.  “Why don’t we get drunk and screw” with this musical.

First, let’s be positive, briefly.  The men fare far better than the women in this production.  Paul Alexander Nolan (Bright Star, Jesus Christ Superstar) nicely inhabits the part of Tully, the ultrafit beach bum lothario who is the lead singer at Margaritaville, a dive Caribbean resort.  His goofball bartender friend Brick is amusing played by Eric Petersen.  The winner in the performer sweepstakes was Don Sparks as JD, the grey haired party relic who is searching for his lost shaker of salt.  The plot points are that obvious if you know the songs (and not as stupid funny as they could be).  Lastly on the positive side are Michael Utley’s orchestrations.  The music really sounded very good.

Now let’s get to the meat of the matter and try to understand why the cheeseburger was not in paradise.  Three main problems:  awful book, bad choreography and a too bland lead actress.  Alison Luff has a nice voice but meanders through this musical with little stage presence and no real chemistry with Mr. Nolan.  Admittedly things started fine but deteriorated when character development through acting was needed to fill in the blanks of so many one-dimensional people.  Vacationing in the Caribbean, she has copious amounts of sex and then turns into a cardboard ingénue?

Written by television’s Greg Garcia and Mike O’Malley, the book is the major flaw.  Shooting for and missing over-the-top silly, the cornball story arc added serious to stupid.  They’re not just drunken wastes of human existence, they have real hearts!  More than a few comedy lines failed to generate laughs, even amongst the singing Parrothead fans.  The second act is wildly over-plotted with too many songs shoehorned in.

As for Kelly Devine’s choreography, the very few moments of inspired ideas were quickly forgotten as the generic party ensemble executed high school quality maneuvers.  It’s copycat, check the box choreography.  Spinning clouds instead of the spinning cupcakes from Priscilla, Queen of the Desert.  The requisite tap number with the shiny outfit costume change (The Book of Mormon, others).  Escape From Margaritaville is not the worst show ever and might even be improved with significant editing.  Director Christopher Ashley (Come From Away) gives this all a professional sheen but it’s slick cruise ship fun at Broadway prices.  Buy a foam shark hat and take pictures with your besties at intermission.

www.escapefrommargaritavillemusical.com

Ailey II

On March 30, 1958, Alvin Ailey and a group of young, black modern dancers perform for the first time as members of Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater at New York’s 92nd Street Y.  Sixty years later, the company has performed in front of an estimated 25 million people in 48 states and 71 countries.  Ailey II was founded in 1974 as a second company.  It’s mission is to merge the spirit of the country’s best young dancers with the passion and creativity of today’s outstanding emerging choreographers.

From this year’s tour, I caught the final performance of the all new program which was presented at the Ailey Citigroup Theater.  The three pieces were Road to One, Touch & Agree and Breaking Point, choreographed by Darrell Grand Moultrie, Juel D. Lane and Renee I. McDonald.  I am not a dance expert but what I saw from my seat was remarkable.  Feats of athleticism combined with rhythmic grace.  Varied musical choices punctuated with dramatic lighting.  A truly impressive assemblage of talent.  An excellent choice if you want to give dance a try.  Ailey II showcases dance that feels approachable, massively energetic, elegant, jaw-droppingly physical and hugely entertaining.  Next stop on this tour is Kansas City.

www.alvinailey.org