(Charles Spencer’s article appeared in the Telegraph, 1/27.)
SOMETIMES the unexpected happens, to glorious effect. I have long believed that The Taming of the Shrew is one of the most boring and deeply unlovable of Shakespeare's plays. The footling disguises of the wooers, the unfunny "comic" servants, and the sheer cruelty of the story, in which a spirited young woman has her will broken by a bullying, mercenary husband, seem to me to show Shakespeare in the worst possible light.
Yet Lucy Bailey's new production, set in the paternalistic Italy of the 1940s and with the whole stage turned into a gigantic bed on which the characters bicker, have pillow fights, and fall in love, proves startling, blissfully funny and unexpectedly moving.
Please call the phone number listed with the theatre for timetables and ticket information.
ASSISTANCE
Playwrights Horizons presents a new play by Leslye Headland (“Bachelorette”), a satire in which two young assistants to a powerful magnate wonder if their jobs are worth the humiliation they endure. Trip Cullman directs. Previews begin Feb. 3. (Playwrights Horizons, 416 W. 42nd St. 212-279-4200.)
BLOOD KNOT
Signature Theatre Company revives this 1961 play by Athol Fugard, about two impoverished biracial South African brothers, starring Colman Domingo and Scott Shepherd. Fugard directs. In previews. (Signature Center, 480 W. 42nd St. 212-244-7529.)
THE BROKEN HEART
Theatre for a New Audience presents this 1633 play by John Ford, set in ancient Sparta, about a princess falling in love despite her best efforts, a nobleman who can’t stand to see his sister happy, and a woman who is forced into marriage. Directed by Selina Cartmell. Previews begin Feb. 4. (The Duke on 42nd Street, 229 W. 42nd St. 646-223-3010.)
CARRIE
MCC Theatre presents a reworking of the 1988 musical, with a book by Lawrence D. Cohen (who adapted Stephen King’s novel for the 1976 De Palma film), music by Michael Gore, and lyrics by Dean Pitchford (“Fame”). Starring Marin Mazzie and Molly Ranson; Stafford Arima directs. In previews. (Lucille Lortel, 121 Christopher St. 212-352-3101.)
CQ/CX
A young black New York Times reporter is accused of plagiarism and tries to clear his name, in this drama by Gabe McKinley, presented by Atlantic Theatre Company. David Leveaux directs. In previews. (Signature Center, 480 W. 42nd St. 212-244-7529.)
GALILEO
F. Murray Abraham stars in the 1947 play by Bertolt Brecht, about the life of the philosopher, scientist, and inventor. Brian Kulick directs the Classic Stage Company production. In previews. (136 E. 13th St. 866-811-4111.)
HOW I LEARNED TO DRIVE
Norbert Leo Butz and Elizabeth Reaser star in the Pulitzer Prize-winning play by Paula Vogel, from 1997, a dark story following an affair between a girl and her uncle. Kate Whoriskey directs. In previews. (Second Stage, 305 W. 43rd St. 212-246-4422.)
HURT VILLAGE
Signature Theatre Company premières this play by Katori Hall, set in a Memphis housing project, about a teen-age rapper and her family, whose plans to relocate are complicated by the unexpected return from Iraq of her father. Patricia McGregor directs. Previews begin Feb. 7. (Signature Center, 480 W. 42nd St. 212-244-7529.)
IONESCOPADE
York Theatre Company presents a revival of this 1974 musical, with music and lyrics by Mildred Kayden, a composite of the works of Eugene Ionesco. Bill Castellino directs. In previews. Opens Feb. 2. (York Theatre at St. Peter’s, Lexington Ave. at 54th St. 212-935-5820.)
LOOK BACK IN ANGER
Sam Gold directs John Osborne’s seminal play from 1956, set in England in the fifties, in which a young working-class man rages against middle-class values. Presented by the Roundabout Theatre Company. In previews. Opens Feb. 2. (Laura Pels, 111 W. 46th St. 212-719-1300.)
LOVESICK OR THINGS THAT DON’T HAPPEN
Project Y Theatre Company presents this musical by Lia Romeo, a string of Valentine’s Day vignettes, with music and lyrics by Tony Biancosino. Michole Biancosino directs. Previews begin Feb. 3. (59E59, at 59 E. 59th St. 212-279-4200.)
A MAP OF VIRTUE
The playwrights collective 13P presents this play written and directed by Erin Courtney, in which a group of friends stuck in the woods has a brush with evil. Ken Rus Schmoll directs. Previews begin Feb. 6. (East Fourth Street Theatre, 83 E. 4th St. 866-811-4111.)
PSYCHO THERAPY
Alex Lippard directs a new comedy by Frank Strausser, about a woman who takes up couples therapy with both her fiancé and her ex-boyfriend. In previews. Opens Feb. 7. (Cherry Lane, 33 Commerce St. 212-352-3101)
RUTHERFORD & SON
At the Mint, Richard Corley directs this revival of the 1912 drama by Githa Sowerby, in which the feckless son of a harsh father finds a way to cut costs in the family’s foundering glassworks and demands hefty compensation in exchange. Previews begin Feb. 4. (311 W. 43rd St. 866-811-4111.)
RX
Kate Fodor’s romantic comedy follows a woman who enters a drug trial for a pill that is purported to end her depression and then falls in love with her doctor. Ethan McSweeny directs the Primary Stages production. In previews. Opens Feb. 7. (59E59, at 59 E. 59th St. 212-279-4200.)
A THOUGHT IN THREE PARTS
The theatre collective FRANK revives a rarely produced play by Wallace Shawn, from 1977, about the ramifications of intimacy. Sarah Tolan-Mee and Lily Spottiswoode direct. Feb. 2-5. (Gene Frankel Theatre, 24 Bond St. 212-777-1767.)
THE UGLY ONE
Daniel Aukin directs the U.S. première of this dark satire by Marius von Mayenburg, co-produced by the Play Company and SoHo Rep, about a German engineer whose life changes after he’s told he is ugly. In previews. Opens Feb. 7. (SoHo Rep, 46 Walker St. 212-352-3101.)
VENUS IN FUR
David Ives’s play, starring Nina Arianda and Hugh Dancy, moves to the Lyceum. Walter Bobbie directs the Manhattan Theatre Club production. Performances resume Feb. 7. (149 W. 45th St. 212-239-6200.)
Like Shakespeare, Sam Mendes plays fast and loose with the elements of drama. His 2010 production of As You Like It included a Depression-era tableau and torture scenes to point to the recession and our Mideast conflicts. In 2010 also, he used modern Wiccan or reconstructionist ritual to delineate the magician, Prospero, in The Tempest (that knowledge echoes here in the role of the prophetess, Queen Margaret, marking Xs on the set, excellently played by Gemma Jones). Mendes’s Richard III, running now through March 4 at BAM’s Harvey Theater (from the transatlantic company The Bridge Project) is a nod to global popular culture, from hand signals you’d find on Star Trek to an alternate version of the court of George V (Kevin Spacey, the star, with shades on hand, who is pictured at one point with whiskers, might even play the monarch–or lookalike Tsar Nicholas II–should the right scripts beam down. Richard III is the product of the Hollywood mindset, the kind unknown before MTV. It uses universalized characters inhabiting a nonspecific or evolving time and place, allowing Spacey, and the other actors, to play themselves, fantasized—they aren’t bound to character the way Olivier was in the ‘50s, portraying Richard with curls and a long nose (besides the obligatory hump); McKellen, as part of a fascist high command, in his ‘90s version, was gaunt, chilling, addicted to nicotine.
The method, freed from context, allows Spacey to work hard without being fixed (in the last act he actually is hung upside down above the stage by his heels). It also lets him become what Shakespeare probably always wanted—a big, hammy (Richard is actually “bigger” than Hamlet), crowd-pleasing villain. Mendes knows this, playing most of Spacey’s scenes downstage center, altering symmetry by varying height (watch the use of crouching and kneeling in the production). The play, which also employs video and supertitles, may seem more melodramatic than you remember, more bombastic than you recall, less dimensioned, and maybe more enjoyable–after all those English lectures, it really isn’t much of an intellectual exercise at all. You might even find yourself wondering if it will connect in some way to Mendes’s upcoming James Bond film Skyfall–for who is Richard III if not the ultimate Bond villain (down to enhanced medical technology)?
Spacey has called it, “A monstrous, epic, huge piece of work” and in an interview with Charlie Rose reminds us that the character of Richard III is in twenty-three out of twenty-six scenes. Using the depth of the Harvey Theater in formidable design, with seemingly endless lines of doors (the scenery is by Tom Piper) and sometime side lighting by Paul Pyant (the projections are by Jon Driscoll and the fashionable, eclectic costumes are by Catherine Zuber). The muscular, strong, powerhouse acting, besides Spacey’s and Jones’s, includes work by Annabel Scholey, Hadyn Gwynne, Chuk Iwuji, Chandler Williams, among others. Mendes keeps his Richard III paced, loud, and alive with drumming. Shakespeare might be just fine with the fact that by basing Richard, in part, on the medieval character Vice, as he did, the play should be as Mendes has said, “about the timeless themes of desire for and abuse of power. A parable.” What we’ll want to reconsider, in time, is if Richard was ever meant to, or could, be more than a blockbuster or part of the Shakespeare franchise, even if, in this highly theatrical production, that is enough.
Jan 10—Mar 4, 2012 (click on Schedule tab above for details)
A limited number of premium orchestra seats for any Thursday, Friday and Saturday performance in February are available through charity ticket auction to benefit BAM arts education. Bid now
Bank of America presents The Bridge Project Richard III Produced by BAM, The Old Vic & Neal Street
By William Shakespeare Directed by Sam Mendes
“Mr. Spacey gives fierce and flashy physical life to every twist of a power-mad man’s corkscrew mind.” —The New York Times
Academy Award winner Kevin Spacey owns the stage as Shakespeare’s outrageous villain Richard III. At the climax of the Wars of the Roses, Richard watches his brother ascend the throne of England and confides in us—with all the profound bitterness of an outcast born with a hunchback and malformed leg—his intention to seize the crown. Navigating an imposing assemblage of some of Shakespeare’s greatest female characters, Richard—played brilliantly by the mercurial and mordantly funny Spacey—lusts for power, assuring his own bloody rise and fall.
Academy Award winner Sam Mendes directs the transatlantic cast in the final production of The Bridge Project, a three-year partnership uniting BAM, The Old Vic, and Neal Street.
BAM Harvey Theater Run time: 3hrs 20 min with intermission Season tickets start at $24 (Jan 10—29 only) Full price tickets start at $30 Prices vary by performance dates and times 8 ticket limit per household
Co-commissioned by and produced in association with Athens and Epidaurus Festival, Centro Niemeyer Spain, Doha Film Institute, Hong Kong Arts Festival, The Istanbul Theatre Festival (IKSV) &The Istanbul Municipal Theatre, Kay and McLean Productions, Napoli Teatro Festival Italia, SHN-Carole Shorenstein-Hays & Robert Nederlander, and Singapore Repertory Theatre.
The complete acting company is as follows: Maureen Anderman, Stephen Lee Anderson, Jeremy Bobb, Nathan Darrow, Jack Ellis*, Haydn Gwynne*, Chuk Iwuji, Isaiah Johnson, Gemma Jones*, Andrew Long, Katherine Manners*, Howard W Overshown, Simon Lee Phillips*, Gary Powell*, Michael Rudko, Annabel Scholey*, Kevin Spacey, Gavin Stenhouse*, Hannah Stokely*, Chandler Williams
*Indicates British member of company
Jack Ellis, Haydn Gwynne, Gemma Jones, Katherine Manners, Simon Lee Phillips, Gary Powell, Annabel Scholey, Gavin Stenhouse, and Hannah Stokely are appearing with the permission of Actors' Equity Association. Maureen Anderman, Stephen Lee Anderson, Jeremy Bobb, Nathan Darrow, Chuk Iwuji, Isaiah Johnson, Andrew Long, Michael Rudko, Kevin Spacey, and Chandler Williams are appearing with the permission of UK Equity, in corporating Variety Artistes' Federation, pursuant to an exchange program between American Equity and UK Equity. The Producers gratefully acknowledge Actors' Equity Association for its assistance of this production.
Scenery by Tom Piper Costumes by Catherine Zuber Lighting by Paul Pyant
Projection by Jon Driscoll Sound by Gareth Fry Music by Mark Bennett
Musical Coordination and Direction by Curtis Moore Fight Direction by Terry King Artistic Associate Gaye Taylor Upchurch Casting by Daniel Swee and Maggie Lunn
(Ben Brantley’s article appeared in The New York Times, 1/28.)
Cynthia Nixon’s gaze has its own grammar. Playing a terminally ill English professor in the inescapably moving new revival of Margaret Edson’s “Wit,” the 1999 Pulitzer Prize winner for drama, Ms. Nixon seems to construct perfectly composed, illuminating and surprising thoughts with her sky-blue eyes — the kind of thoughts that if you saw them in print would make you stop and savor and reread.
It’s not that Vivian Bearing, Ms. Nixon’s character, doesn’t possess a sharp and eloquent tongue. She is, please note, an esteemed and intimidating scholar of the metaphysical poetry of John Donne. But the eyes are what first hook and then hold you through this immaculately staged 100-minute journey through the final months of one woman’s life. And while the eyes are usually in agreement with the weighty, exquisitely arranged words Vivian speaks, they also hint at something more profound, which both eludes and informs her intelligence.
(Bruce Weber’s article appeared in The New York Times, 1/26.)
Nicol Williamson, a Scottish-born actor whose large, renegade talent made him a controversial Hamlet, an eccentric Macbeth, an angry, high-strung Vanya and, on the screen, a cocaine-sniffing Sherlock Holmes — and whose querulous temperament could make his antics as commanding as his performances — died on Dec. 16 in Amsterdam, where he had lived for more than 20 years. He was 75.
The cause was esophageal cancer, his son, Luke, said Wednesday on the Web site nicolwilliamson.com. “He didn’t want any fuss made over his passing,” Luke Williamson said in an e-mail, explaining the delay in reporting his father’s death. “He was not interested in publicity.”
Mr. Williamson was rarely described as dull, sometimes as uncooperative, more often as unpredictable or tempestuous.
(Michael Billington’s article appeared in the Guardian, 1/24.)
Who is the most influential British director of modern times? Peter Brook revolutionised our notion of the empty space. Peter Hall has shown what permanent institutions can achieve. But arguably the greatest legacy comes from Tyrone Guthrie (1900-71) – even if his name is scarcely known to a younger generation. Even to label Guthrie as "British" is slightly misleading, since he once dubbed himself "a very Irish sort of Anglo-Scot". But this six-foot-five giant of a man was not only a great director: his unceasing campaign for the open stage has left its mark on theatres all over the world.
Although he worked at London's Old Vic from 1933 to 1939, Guthrie wanted to get away from traditional proscenium theatres. His first great adventure in open stages came in 1948 when he directed Lyndsay's Satire of the Three Estates at Edinburgh's Assembly Hall of the Church of Scotland, as part of the newly formed Edinburgh festival: those lucky enough to have seen it still talk of the production's flamboyant pageantry. In 1952 Guthrie was invited to create a Shakespeare festival in a tent in Stratford, Ontario, which led to the building of a magnificent thrust theatre when the festival became a permanent fixture. A TV programme about the Canadian Stratford inspired an eye specialist thousands of miles away in Chichester to set about creating a similar structure in Sussex. And so the story rolls on: the Sheffield Crucible, the aptly-named Guthrie theatre in Minneapolis and the new Royal Shakespeare Theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon – all owe their shape and style to the vision of this peripatetic missionary.
83-year-old winner of three Academy Awards and eight Grammys, Burt Bacharach's ANYONE WHO HAD A HEART, covering his professional success and personal difficulties, written with Robert Greenfield, to Jonathan Burnham and Claire Wachtel at Harper, for publication in November 2012, by Amy Schiffman and Brian Lipson from Intellectual Property Group (World).
(Charles Isherwood’s article appeared in The New York Times, 1/23.)
“Is that gluten free?” asked a woman behind me, in response to an offer of peanut butter on toast offered by one of the cast members of “Gob Squad’s Kitchen (You’ve Never Had It So Good).” Before the show begins, the audience is invited to take a tour of the stage cum movie studio where it will be performed.
“There’s no such thing as gluten in the 1960s,” came the answer, delivered with a smile and just a little bit of British cheek.
The movie studio on the stage at the Public Theater, where this smart, goofy and surprisingly moving show is playing through Feb. 5, is a makeshift mockup of Andy Warhol’s Factory, or at least the filmmaking component of it, around 1965. Nobody had heard of the evils of gluten back when that turbulent decade was beginning to swing, and Warhol was churning out movies almost as quickly as he was slapping down silk-screens. Probably nobody at the Factory had heard of the evils of amphetamines either.
Please call the phone number listed with the theatre for timetables and ticket information.
CARRIE
MCC Theatre presents a reworking of the 1988 musical, with a book by Lawrence D. Cohen (who adapted Stephen King’s novel for the 1976 De Palma film), music by Michael Gore, and lyrics by Dean Pitchford (“Fame”). Starring Marin Mazzie and Molly Ranson; Stafford Arima directs. Previews begin Jan. 31. (Lucille Lortel, 121 Christopher St. 212-352-3101.)
CQ/CX
A young black New York Times reporter is accused of plagiarism and tries to clear his name, in this drama by Gabe McKinley, presented by Atlantic Theatre Company. David Leveaux directs. In previews. (Peter Norton Space, 555 W. 42nd St. 212-279-4200.)
HOW I LEARNED TO DRIVE
Norbert Leo Butz and Elizabeth Reaser star in the Pulitzer Prize-winning play by Paula Vogel, from 1997, a dark story following an affair between a girl and her uncle. Kate Whoriskey directs. In previews. (Second Stage, 305 W. 43rd St. 212-246-4422.)
IONESCOPADE
York Theatre Company presents a revival of this 1974 musical, with music and lyrics by Mildred Kayden, a composite of the works of Eugene Ionesco. Bill Castellino directs. In previews. (York Theatre at St. Peter’s, Lexington Ave. at 54th St. 212-935-5820.)
LOOK BACK IN ANGER
Sam Gold directs John Osborne’s seminal play from 1956, set in England in the fifties, in which a young working-class man rages against middle-class values. The cast includes Adam Driver. Presented by the Roundabout Theatre Company. In previews. (Laura Pels, 111 W. 46th St. 212-719-1300.)
PSYCHO THERAPY
Alex Lippard directs a new comedy by Frank Strausser, about a woman who takes up couples therapy with her fiancé and her ex-boyfriend. In previews. Opens Jan. 29. (Cherry Lane, 38 Commerce St. 212-352-3101.)
RUSSIAN TRANSPORT
Janeane Garofalo stars in a new play by Erika Sheffer, about a Russian family in Brooklyn who welcome an uncle who has come to pursue the American dream. Scott Elliott directs the New Group production. In previews. Opens Jan. 30. (Acorn, 410 W. 42nd St. 212-239-6200.)
RX
Kate Fodor’s romantic comedy follows a woman who enters a drug trial for a pill that is purported to end her depression and then falls in love with her doctor. Ethan McSweeny directs the Primary Stages production. In previews. (59E59, at 59 E. 59th St. 212-279-4200.)
THESE SEVEN SICKNESSES
The Flea presents this five-hour play (with breaks for dinner and dessert, served by the performers), written by Sean Graney, which combines new versions of Sophocles’ seven surviving plays in a meta-narrative about chance, fate, and the human condition. Ed Sylvanus Iskandar directs. In previews. Opens Jan. 29. (41 White St. 212-352-3101.)
WIT
Cynthia Nixon stars in Margaret Edson’s Pulitzer Prize-winning play from 1995, about a poetry professor undergoing experimental cancer treatment. Lynne Meadow directs the Manhattan Theatre Club production. In previews. Opens Jan. 26. (Samuel J. Friedman, 261 W. 47th St. 212-239-6200.)
YOSEMITE
At the Rattlestick, Pedro Pascal directs a new play by Daniel Talbott, in which three siblings head to the Sierra Nevada in an attempt to outrun their past. In previews. Opens Jan. 26. (224 Waverly Pl. 212-868-4444.)
(Michael Billington’s article appeared in the Guardian, 1/18.)
Some dramatists are prey to a governing obsession. Others turn their hand to a variety of subjects. Nicholas Wright, who in the past 12 months has given us plays about Terence Rattigan and the Duchess of Windsor, is emphatically one of the latter, and in Travelling Light he has come up with a love-letter to the movies and an appealingly intelligent evocation of the Jewish folk culture that formed the basis of American cinema.