loney's show notes
loney's show notes
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loney's show notes
by glenn loney, october 5, 2007
about glenn loney
caricature of
glenn loney by sam norkin.
rebooting & getting-started for the nyc season
2007-2008:
it has been a long hard summer for your scribe.
during july & august--as has been his custom for many summers--he reported
on major festivals, such as those at bayreuth, bregenz, edinburgh,
munich, & salzburg. in fact, this past summer was his 51st
visit to these prestigious fests of opera, drama, & dance.
initially, way back in 1956, when he went
off to eucom as a university of maryland overseas professor, he made
a bee-line for bayreuth & its historic margräflisches-opernhaus,
designed by galli-bibiena, as well as for richard wagner's famed festspielhaus.
[eucom was code for the us army's european-command:
we were still an army-of-occupation in west germany. in the far east, the
code-word was fecom.]
as i had written a thesis-report on max reinhardt
at uc/berkeley, i felt i also had to visit the salzburg festival, founded
by reinhardt & friends. munich was a major center of university of maryland
classes, and i stumbled on bregenz, passing through on a train, transfixed
by the sight of an operetta-stage floating out in the waters of lake constance.
having had not one, but two, scots grandmothers,
i discovered the edinburgh festival by default. in those long-gone days, the
dollar was king, so paying for festival-tickets--which were never sold-out,
as so few tourists were around then--was painless.
at that time, i had no idea about press-offices
& press-tickets. but i did notice, in reading the new york herald-tribune,
the new york times, & the christian science monitor, that--in
cultural-reportage, at least--europe began with london & ended in paris.
so i began sending some unsolicited reports to
the herald-trib, the monitor, & the now-defunct theatre
arts monthly. only in 1960, newly returned stateside & now
teaching in new york--when i began my annual summer-safaris to european festivals--did
i discover the miracle of free-seats for critics!
in those days, i had three entire summer months
to cover major & minor european festivals, such as those in holland, aarhus,
stockholm, copenhagen, flanders, chichester, stratford, avingnon, york, vienna,
& verona. this was the time when a three-month-long eurail-pass
cost only $300! second-class, of course.
over the course of four years teaching in europe,
north africa, & the middle-east--sa'udi arabia!, i had made many
friends, so there were always sofas, spare-beds, or carpets on which to lay
my performance-pixilated weary head. i also became expert on sleeping in railway
& bus-stations, as well as taking night-flights & overnight rail-journeys.
what i soon discovered, however, was that some
envious stateside colleagues & credulous readers assumed i must be very
wealthy to be able to afford three months of five-star hotels & dining
at the tour d'argent. for the record, when i was teaching in europe,
i was paid $2,500 per year, plus free boq accommodations on army & air-force
bases.
and i have never had a meal at the tour d'argent,
although pierre cardin once had booked a table there for our espace-cardin
interview. as i had to record our conversation, i had to pass, because they
do not permit recording-devices in the ratatouille…
returned the us, i was paid $5,000 per year at
hofstra college on long island--now hofstra university. when i moved to brooklyn
college, the pay improved, but not by much. so, over many summers, i learned
how to travel & survive on very little.
i was also able to see & to report on some
absolutely splendid opera, dance, & drama productions. in addition, i
was often privileged to interview major directors, performers, playwrights,
conductors, musicians, designers, & theatre-technicians. all of these
interviews have been recently digitized & will soon be available online.
when my father & then my mother became aged
& senile--no one knew about alzheimer's then--i had to reduce my three-month
european-summer to two. this i have now maintained for many years, but, as
friends with sofas have passed-away, i have become dependent on inexpensive
but friendly hotels & pensions.
unfortunately, this past summer, almost the same
itinerary as that for summer 2006, cost twice as much! european prices
had gone up in the interim, of course, but the virtual doubling was
owing to the precipitous fall of the dollar against the euro!
and the dollar continues to fall. americans who
have not traveled outside the united states--and thus not been obliged to
change their dollars for more stable currency--will not have noticed that
this has happened. how & why it has happened is another story…
your scribe has never been paid travel-expenses
by any of the publications for which he has written. as for non-paying academic-journals,
you often even have to pay membership-dues so the organization can afford
to publish its journal.
so, neither paid nor thanked for
what he has written, he is debating whether he can any longer afford to travel
abroad to report & review on the performing arts. an end-of-october baltic-theatre-conference
in st. petersburg is thus out of the question.
the show-notes european-reports
which precede this new york city filing could be the last of this long series.
unless our president & our congress can restore the value & the prestige
of the us dollar abroad…
not only did your scribe see many remarkable--as
well as some horrendous--opera, drama, & dance productions this
past summer, but he also snapped some 4,000 print-images, 700
slide-images, & 1,500 digital-images for his infotography™
photo-collection. the trademark designation was finally awarded in late june!
all these images need to be captioned,
artfully-arranged in real & virtual albums, & computer-indexed--before
i forget if this or that shot was taken in prague or in kloster
neuburg…
this is a lot of hard work--for which i am also
neither paid nor thanked--but it has to be done, as there are now more than
300,000 infotography™ images, all of which will
eventually be digitized & made available online at infotography.biz
as i am the chief correspondent for new
york theatre-wire's sister web-site, new york museums.com
as well, there is also an eight-inch-high stack of press-kits from
september openings of major museum-shows in manhattan. these have to be listed
& at least summarized as soon as show-notes is filed.
this will be followed closely by delayed reports
of major museum & gallery shows seen while on the grand tour of european
festivals. the photo-images on the pr cds for some of these exhibitions are
too good to file away without sharing them.
for these reasons--and also because i am confronted
by a towering-stack of theatre-programs for shows that opened while i was
away in europe & those that have bowed this past month--i want to clear-the-decks,
so to speak, by surveying briefly the range of these productions by genre
or subject, as i did for many years for the educational theatre journal,
players, & other non-paying publications.
perhaps--if i ever get caught-up on captioning
& indexing infotography™ photo-images--i can return
to my previous practice of giving each production a separate comment.
i do envy those theatre-award-nominators &
awards-voters who are not obliged to review the shows they see, in
order to justify their free-tickets. actually, as both the historian &
a member of the executive-board of the outer critics circle & a
drama desk awards-voter, i could, i suppose, claim reviewing-immunity.
on the other hand, as both a lover & historian
of theatre, dance, & opera--not to overlook some forty-years of teaching
the history & practice of the performing arts--it seems only fair to salute
the achievements of the multitude of talented & hard-working people who
bring us their performance-offerings.
if, however, they turn out to be burnt-offerings,
it can be a mitzvah to suggest how the roast or ratatouille
might be reclaimed or recycled. so great an expenditure of thought, energy,
preparation, time, money, & hope goes into many a new york city production--whether
on broadway or off-off-broadway--that this should be recognized & even
honored, where earned.
new plays listed:
horton foote's dividing the estate
[****]
lucy thurber's scarcity
[**]
jane martin's flags [***]
kate fodor's 100 saints you should know
[***]
marie jones' rock doves [**]
thomas kilroy's the shape of metal
[**]
john b. keane's sive [***]
ilan hatsor's masked [**]
arthur giron's the coffee trees
[not rated]
overview:
advice often given to novice-authors--whether
they be novelists or playwrights--is to "write what you know!" this has proved
to be good advice indeed, provided the first-hand experiences are really interesting
to others. a banal coming-of-age in suburban denver is a problematic subject.
[of course, there are exceptions to this rule.
had charles lutwig dodson followed it, we would have had no through
the looking-glass adventures in wonderland…]
but a young woman's explicit account of having
been repeatedly sexually-violated by her loving father is almost a sure ticket
for the best-seller express!
as for winning tony awards, who can predict
the critical fate of close-encounters with yourself as play-fodder?
seamy personal banalities, however, do attract obies.
family-life among the haves & have-nots:
horton foote's dividing the
estate--as in most of the dramas by this venerable nonagenarian, now
a national-treasure--is certainly written about issues & people he knows
well. what makes it especially appealing to audiences is that the experience
of contentious siblings fighting over who is to get what from a family estate
is an all-too-common theme in american life.
although the first act seems over-extended for
what it needs to establish, the second act really focuses the contenders on
what they believe is due them from the estate, even though grandmother [elizabeth
ashley] is not yet dead.
borrowing heavily against future expectations,
a damaged & needful son & daughter have no real idea of the current
worth of what was a once prosperous farming-estate, barely kept afloat--among
farmland conversions into mcmansion-territories--by an honest & dutiful
grandson, called "son," who truly loves the land.
the play is set in texas in 1987, but issues
such who gets the dining-table & the south-forty are still contentious
questions out there in the heartland, as well as in my native california.
[cousin milton got the loney brothers summer cattle-pasture in the high sierras.
i got nothing…]
horton foote's daughter, hallie foote,
is outstanding as the shrill, demanding mary jo, married to a blowhard failure,
with two spoiled teen-age daughters. devon abner, as the long-suffering
son, is low-key but effective in a generally admirable cast, directed by michael
wilson.
at least foote's feckless texans have a sense
of who they are--or, rather, who the family once was--as nominal property-owners
in a society in decline. that can hardly be said of some other families in
the fall new play lineup.
white-trash/trailer-trash tales:
what is the special appeal for younger american
playwrights of failed lives, lived out in trashy trailer-courts, cheap-motels,
or even in sub-prime tract-homes? are they really writing what they know--or
what they imagine such lives to be, from the second-hand experience of watching
such stereotypes on television?
does adam rapp have a first-hand experience
of such people? was finer noble gases--and, now, american
sligo--urgently written from intimate knowledge of such folks?
for that matter, do lucy thurber &
kate fodor also share such experiences of the pathetic lives of downscale-americans?
thurber's scarcity seems written
by-the-numbers, but her brawling, hard-drinking white-trash don't live in
a trailer-court. they seem, instead, to knock around in a cheap tract-home,
nominally sited in western massachusetts.
apparently, there are red-necks everywhere.
the parents are a disaster-area, but their two
kids are bright. a well-intentioned but patronizing new teacher from elitist-boston
is helping son billy [jessie eisenberg] to enter deerfield academy.
she also has "a thing for him." billy's overwise younger sister reads the
tarot pack. jason gay staged.
at least scarcity, flags,
& 100 saints you should know avoid the sordid excesses of
bugs, a recent critical success, but really only another of
the trailer-trash genre.
but flags--also set in a tract-home--has
visual excesses of a different kind. playwright jane martin--aka jon
jory--presents an unemployed working-class garbage-man hero [the ajax-like
chris mulkey], outraged that he has been lied-to about his adored soldier-son,
violently killed in iraq.
he hangs the mutilated & bloody american
flag that his also mutilated & bloody son died defending upside-down on
his house. this is not only a signal of distress, but also an offense to the
neighbors, who employ various stratagems to make him take it down. including
the murder of his younger son: democracy at work!
a sort of fox-tv/greek-chorus frames the action,
but the bitterly satiric point about president bush's military-adventures
in iraq is vividly made without this "cute" device. henry wishcamper
directed.
kate fodor's 100 saints you should know
ranges from parish-house to the equivalents of trailer-trash domesticity.
ethan mcsweeny has staged a cast including zoe kazan & lois
smith. father matthew [jermey shamos] first encounters theresa
[janel moloney], not as a saint, but as an attractive young cleaning-woman,
scrubbing his toilet.
he has been sent home to his crazy old catholic
mother because some male-nude art-photos he tore from a george platt lynes
book in the public--not the pubic--library have been found in his desk!
the unmarried, desperate single-mother theresa needs his help, but he is unable
to help even himself…
in his time, the late arthur miller validated
the idea of the tragedy of the common man. unfortunately, we are not
dealing with willy & linda loman here.
are there red-necks in ireland?
it's odd that the off-broadway season opens with
a trio of irish family-dramas. in john b. keane's sive--new
to new york, but written in the 1950s--a sensitive young irish girl, born
a bastard, is driven to suicide rather than marry a lecherous but wealthy
old farmer.
her dead mother's bog-cutter brother--just this
side of trailer-trash--& his termagant wife want to be rid of her &
her ever-scolding grandmother, with some cash into the bargain. a painful
& powerful tragedy of the common man/woman!
ciarán o'reilly directed an excellent
cast in charles corcoran's claustrophobic irish hut & hearth.
rock doves, by marie jones,
features an irish-underclass beyond trailer-trash. in an abandoned old row-house
marked for demolition, a blathering old homeless man [marty maguire]
& and a fearful young informer [johnny hopkins], on the run from
the ira, have taken shelter.
they are joined by the wise, feisty prossie bella
[natalie brown] & her trannie brother [tim ruddy], also
known as lillian. things do not turn out well, despite the cooings of the
rock-doves in the eaves.
jones also wrote the admirable stones in
his pockets, which made it to broadway, no less! these doves, however,
are not broadway-bound. ian mcelhinney directed.
in thomas kilroy's the shape
of metal, the set may look like a barn with some trashy clutter. but
this is not trailer-trash detritus: it is actually composed of artworks created
by an iconoclastic & aged irish sculptress, nell jeffrey [roberta maxwell],
who has lived by her own rules, aesthetic & otherwise, & is now facing
passing-over, as well as being enshrined in the national gallery.
she has not done right by her two daughters,
played by molly ward & julia gibson. the estimable brian
murray directed. but athol fugard's the road to mecca
is still my favorite play about female-sculptors.
from ireland's "troubles" off to family-conflicts
in palestine & guatemala!
from the centuries-long british occupation &
subjugation of ireland, through the recent conflicts between protestants &
catholics, it has pleased the irish to refer to outright acts of military
& paramilitary violence as "the troubles."
no such euphemism can apply to the confrontations
between arabs & israelis in palestine or over what the new york
times is pleased to call "disputed-lands."
but it is an israeli playwright--not an
arab-dramatist--who has imagined, in masked, a disastrous family-confrontation
among three palestinian-arab brothers, one of whom has become an israeli-informer.
another brother is what israelis commonly call an arab-terrorist, although
he is seen as a freedom-fighter by fellow-arabs.
this does not end well for the informer, especially
as it is set in what seems to be a halal butcher-shop.
nor--despite the blather of president bush &
condoleezza rice about an arab-israeli "peace-process"--do the current confrontations
in the middle-east bode well for an eventual happy-ending.
armageddon will be the more likely outcome,
to the delight of those born-again christians who will be instantly raised-up
into heaven in the rapture. no funerals or grave-sites necessary!
ami dayan directed masked,
not the rapture.
on theatre row, anton chekhov's
the cherry orchard was paired, in revolving-rep, with arthur
giron's guatemalan family-drama, the coffee trees.
i did not see the resonance ensemble's matching
production of chekhov's [fruitless] masterpiece, as i already knew how it
comes out. along with the seagull & uncle vanya,
it is one of those unquestioned modern-classics that one can see too often.
just as those earlier & royalty-free dramas, midsummer night's
dream & macbeth, deserve a well-earned rest.
arthur giron is an old friend whom i do not see
often enough. he is the estimable author of edith stein, the
searching drama dealing with that famed & now sainted jewish-intellectual
who became a cloistered roman-catholic nun, only to be gassed by the gestapo
as a jew.
for some, the question was: did edith stein die
as a catholic or a jew? giron's thoughtful play seeks to resolve that
dilemma. but the past pope had other ideas about her final state of mind…
another interesting giron drama is becoming
memory, well worth a reading. or even a new production!
born in guatemala, arturo giron knows the country
& its varied peoples very well. there are still lots of mayas, some hispanics,
meztisos, & creoles, as well as european immigrants who fled the holocaust.
your scribe, on the other hand, knows guatemala
only from brief visits years ago, passing through guatemala city on the way
to the towering ancient mayan-temples in tikal, or making an easter-pilgrimage
to chichicastenango--with the great volcano, pocacatapetl, looming in the
distance.
i was really unaware how torn the country has
been by revolutionary-raids, as well as undergoing a kind of religious-transformation,
as evangelical-missionaries replace the catholic church in the hearts &
minds of many peasants.
it is these dramatic changes which inform the
action of giron's the coffee trees. but i fell into the trap
that one often does when a new play has been inspired by an older classic.
i was so intent on noting which of the guatemalan
characters were cognates for chekhov's originals--not at all easy to figure-out,
as the actress playing lyubov ranyevskaya seemed more like mme. arkadina,
in the seagull--that i was not quite understanding who the revolutionaries
were [maoists? che guevarists?] or what they were fighting for.
not to mention the evangelicals, although i do
know that the seventh-day adventists, jehovah's witnesses, & the latter-day
saints are very busy in meso-america.
[the missionary-character in giron's drama seemed
rather like kilroy in tennessee williams' camino real,
in that he has an enlarged-heart. this may foredoom him to sudden death, but
it also implies he has a heart big enough for all of jesus' children!]
dr. marion castleberry directed the dedicated
cast.
chekhov's cherry-trees no longer bore good-fruit,
deserving therefore to be uprooted & replaced--also an edible-metaphor
for the ranyevski family itself. but giron's coffee-trees produce very good
coffee-beans, although they take five years to mature. this was a botanical-curiosity
i longed to learn more about.
perhaps it is because we are now so familiar
with chekhov's characters, that the specifically czarist-russian
nature of the great rural estates & the social hierarchies are almost
incidental to the rather sad family-drama being played-out.
for audiences who know little of the conquistador-past
of central america, its varied 19th century class-systems, &
its peoples, more background would be helpful. but then you would possibly
have a three-part epic, not a guatemalan cherry orchard in the shadow
of a great volcano.
josh logan once had the idea of adapting
the cherry orchard to a post-civil-war american-southland. he
called it the wisteria trees. on its own terms, it worked well
as an adaptation, but when i saw it, i was spending much of my time trying
to compare logan's characters with chekhov's.
i now see from perusing the program that the
resonance ensemble's matching production of cherry orchard is, in fact,
also set in the american south, but in 1948, instead of the post-bellum
former confederacy.
what i would really look forward to would be
an arthur giron drama about what life is really like in present-day guatemala,
activated by characters who owe nothing to chekhov. as giron taught playwriting
for many years at carnegie-mellon in pittsburgh, i know he can do this!
old plays revived or recycled:
wm. shakespeare's king lear
[***]
moliere's the misanthrope [****]
leo tolstoy's the power of darkness
[**]
a.r. gurney's the dining room
[****]
charles l. mee's iphigenia 2.0
[***]
overview:
over at bam, the royal shakespeare company was
also playing chekhov--the seagull, not the cherry
orchard--in rotating-rep with shakespeare's king lear: two
royalty-free classics!
the compelling reason to see yet another lear--after
just experiencing kevin kline in this actor's-summit role--was the
opportunity to see sir ian mckellen embody this demanding character.
lord olivier noted--and not only to your
scribe--that when an actor is young & vigorous, he doesn't have the life-experience
to play othello or lear, but, when he is actually old, he lacks the vigor
that is needed to play such roles even in repertory.
as he could play a minor chekhovian character
on alternate evenings, the aged sir ian could conserve his energy, so he focused
it all on lear's developing self-destructive tragedy. but even though fans
were fighting for tickets, this was no star-turn.
mckellen inhabited the role, made it his
own. unfortunately, this could not be said of some of the other rsc actors,
who seemed to be playing stereotypes, rather than real characters. trevor
nunn directed, deploying his troops artfully about the stage.
it was duly noted that sir ian would at one point
in lear's madness appear nude. and so he did, but i had already seen
him nude in this very drama, but as "poor tom" edgar, not lear. this was many
years ago with the prospect theatre in the assembly hall of the church of
scotland in edinburgh. this factoid does not appear in the bam program-bio,
but it was an impressive first!
jonathan bank's mint theatre has
established itself as valuable theatre-resource for reviving forgotten or
neglected early modern classics, notably of the british theatre. these are
always well-cast, effectively-staged, & ingeniously-designed.
this fall, he launched the mint season with a
revival of count leo tolstoy's the power of darkness.
the "new english version" was crafted by martin platt, who also directed.
i do not have any earlier english versions
of this problematic-play at hand, but i suspect that even a stilted late 19th
century translation might give this dire tale more of the period-feeling it
needs to engage serious attention.
as played, the production felt more like an earnest
semi-amateur event, with the admittedly-overblown melodramatic-elements defying
the willing suspension of disbelief.
tolstoy's war & peace is an
entirely different kind of work, but it does lend itself to believable dramatization--even
if presented as a coast-of-utopian trilogy. darkness could have been
left in the closet or on the shelf.
presented on east fourth street by the new york
theatre workshop, in what could be regarded as an immense post-modernist aquarium,
sans aqua, molière's the misanthrope--staged
by the post-post-modernist european enfant-terrible stage-director,
ivo van hove--is an entirely dynamic & deafening modern
"take" on the social-hypocrisies of the paris & versailles of louis xiv.
of course, the elegant but brittle 17th
century courtly façade of elaborate-etiquette, feigned-friendship &
faked sympathetic-concern is central to the biting social-comedy of molière's
original, with the inconveniently truth-telling misanthrope, alceste, at its
center.
van hove has moved the characters & the action
to now. guess what: although the good-manners are gone, all the hypocrisy
& thinly-concealed malice is still there!
plus ça change, as they say…
tony harrison's updated & cleverly
rhymed translation has many amusing felicities, but--as most of the speeches
are deafeningly shouted or furiously ranted--it is often difficult to discern
what points have been made. among the fine cast are bill camp, joan macintosh,
thomas jay ryan, & jeanine serralles.
the ongoing production is simultaneously videoed,
projected on three large plasma panels on the upstage-wall. there is even
a very messy food-fight, leaving the stage strewn with debris, to which alceste
adds some trash he has just dragged in from east fourth, the exterior-actions
also shown on the tv panels! the curse of cell-phones is also involved in
the cause of hypocritical social-interaction!
the keen company's brisk revival of a.r. "pete"
gurney's the dining room is admirable & a timely
reminder of the now almost vanished wasp-world. there may still be some wasps
up in greenwich, but they are keeping a low-profile in the face of political-correctness,
which itself should have run its course. jonathan silverstein staged.
[there was also a dining-room & fine dining-room
table & chairs in dividing the estate, but horton foote's
texans are certifiably not wasps!]
as for charles mee's free-associative
updatings of attic greek tragedies, my favorite is still big love,
not to be confused with the tv series. signature theatre is having
a mee season, with iphigenia 2.0 as the premiere.
in addition to conflating some sage advice from
george washington with euripides' original text, plus other alien-materials,
mee has changed the original reason for the necessity of iphigenia's human-sacrifice.
instead of being commanded by the olympian gods,
it is now demanded by agamemnon's troops. why should they risk their lives
attacking troy, if their commander is not willing to make a similar sacrifice?
as they are all attired in us combat-uniforms, it is as if president bush
were being forced to sacrifice his beloved daughter, jenna bush, to
demonstrate his dedication to his war, as well as his fitness to command!
tina landau directed a fine cast that included
louisa krause, rocco sisto, kate mulgrew, tom nelis, & seth numrich.
once known as charles l. mee, jr--which
made one wonder what mee sr was doing with his life--this generous playwright
has put his eclectic dramas online, offering them royalty-free for downloading
& production!
new & old musicals:
xanadu [****]
walmartopia [***]
grease [****]
gone missing [***]
overview:
xanadu's backstory as a movie made
its future as a broadway musical seem problematic. in the event, now at the
helen hayes, it is great deliberately-over-acted tuneful fun-on-roller-skates.
seating some of the audience onstage in a mock greek-theatre conformation
was also a stroke of design-genius, thanks to david gallo.
mary testa shines as a force-of-evil muse,
with kerry butler, cheyenne jackson, & tony roberts
starring. christopher ashley staged, with choreography by dan knechtges.
in xanadu, tony roberts proves an outstanding
musical-comedy star. what is more, roberts looks a natural to play
the president in the biopic, george w. bush builds his heritage-library
in waco!
another jolly musical romp is walmartopia,
down at the minetta lane theatre. despite the liberal use of the ubiquitous
yellow smiley-face logo--as well as the severed-head of founder sam walton--this
production does not bear the blessing of fay walton or the other billionaire-heirs.
in fact, the program clearly states--but in very
small type near the back: "walmartopia is a satire and is not endorsed,
sponsored, or otherwise affiliated with, in any way, wal-mart stores, inc.
or any affiliates of wal-mart stores, inc."
so very rich, but no sense of humor at all!
the stylish & ingenious set-design of david
korins is almost worth the price of admission alone. daniel goldstein
staged the charming cast, with choreography by wendy seyb.
book, music, & lyrics are the inventions
of catherine capellaro & andrew rohn. among the amusing
production-numbers are "american dream," "march of the executives," "the future
is ours," & "one-stop salvation." plus the theme-song: "walmartopia."
your scribe is so busy with indexing the infotography™
photo-images that he has no time to watch tv or read the tabloids. so he didn't
realize that the current revival of grease was cast somewhat
in american idol fashion. or perhaps like the old major bowes
amateur-hour?
in any case, max crum & laura osnes
are just fine as danny & sandy. in fact, the entire cast is attractive
& energy-charged. my favorite songs from the broadway original are wonderfully
reprised: "beauty school dropout" & "it's raining on prom night"!
the brilliantly talented kathleen marshall
directed & choreographed, strongly assisted by the designs of derek
mclane, martin pakledinaz, & kenneth posner.
down on barrow street, the civilians are presenting
gone missing, created by the company, from interviews made with
very ordinary people, about various kinds of lost things--including a mummified-head.
it's written & directed by steven cosson, with music & lyrics
by michael friedman.
the gray-suit-clad cast recycles the generally
banal interviews in character, moving with some sense of style. the songs
inspired by things gone-missing are more interesting than the actual interviews.
opera & other musical-productions & events:
new york city opera's margaret garner
[***]
lamama's caravaggio chiaroscuro
[**]
willette murphy klausner's three mo'
tenors [***]
at the met: a tribute to beverly sills
[*****]
at steinway hall: manhattan school of music
preview
overview:
fugitive-slaves sing!
many years ago, your scribe flew down to the
virginia coast for the world premiere of thea musgrave's opera
based on the life of a famed escaped plantation-slave, sojourner truth.
denyse graves valiantly acted & sang the title-role, even though
she had broken her leg in rehearsals.
since that time, i have never again encountered
that opera, either in concert or in production. it's to be hoped that will
not also be the fate of toni morrison & richard danielpour's
margaret garner--also about an escaped slave.
[for that matter, whatever became of the malcolm
x opera? when it premiered at the new york city opera, beverly
sills was immensely gratified to see so many african-americans in the
audience. she asked me: "do you think they will become subscribers?" i thought
not.]
fortunately, margaret garner is
both dramatically & musically more effective than either malcolm
or sojourner. unlike some black-themed plays & works of musical-theatre,
it employs large forces of both white & black actor/singers, rather than
having only a few token-whites.
this is a truly tragic tale, as the historical
margaret garner killed her own child, rather than have it taken from her &
returned to slavery. there was an extended fugitive-slave trial, which nonetheless
returned garner & her family to slavery.
but in the opera--based on morrison's version
of garner's life in beloved-- she is sentenced to hang. reprieved
at the last moment, she chooses to hang herself. this shocking climax, unfortunately,
is not well-staged in the new nyco production, so director tazewell thompson
may want to rethink it.
tracie luck was powerful both visually
& vocally as margaret, strongly supported by gregg baker, as her
slave-husband robert. timothy mix was the overbearing, eminently-hissable
plantation-owner villain edward gaines. george manahan conducted with spirit
& respect for the spirit & scope of this operatic-drama.
as your scribe left the new york state theatre
with a guest, she commented: "there aren't as many good songs as in porgy
& bess."
well, you can't win them all…
46th anniversary at lamama!
la mama ellen stewart, now 84,
appeared on the balcony of her intimate theatre down on east fourth street
to introduce--as has long been her custom--the first show of lamama's 46th
season, caravaggio chiaroscuro. most off-off-broadway
ensembles expire of fund-raising exhaustion after a decade or two, but ellen
& lamama forge ever onward!
caravaggio chiaroscuro
is a curious work--half in italian, half in english, sung & spoken. it
was conceived by gian marco lo forte, who also provided the set &
the libretto, with score by duane boutté, who also plays caravaggio
with a fierce passion.
if you really want to know about caravaggio's
strange genius & disastrous behavior, you would be well-advised to read
an unsparing biography. even if you already know something about this boastful,
aggressive, combative painter of great religious themes, you may not quite
understand from this show what happened to him in rome, when he was under
the protection & patronage of cardinal del monte.
some years ago, michael straight--then
nancy hicks' second-in-command at the national endowment for
the arts in dc--wrote a play titled caravaggio. i went to cincinnati's
playhouse-in-the-park to see the world premiere & talk about the play
& the production with both michael & his brilliant stage-designer,
jo mielziener.
those memories have stayed with me: especially
the image of the abandoned caravaggio desperately running along the beach,
as the ship sails off, with his beloved paintings on board. this drama deserves
a revival.
as for caravaggio chiaroscuro,
i had the sensation that time had stood still down at lamama. there was the
same sense of avant-garde--if somewhat amateurish--adventure that pervaded
its earliest productions.
and what happened to the three
sopranos?
the laurels of luciano, placido, & josé
are safe & secure. even with two teams of singers, three mo'
tenors is no match for the original three tenors.
given its black or ebonic-english title, you can guess that all of the vocalists
are african-american
i saw/heard cast a: the alternates are called
cast 1, so no one will feel he or she is getting second-best. if the other
tenor-team is as good as victor robertson, duane a. moody, &
james n. berger, jr, then alternate-audiences are being well-served.
but their concert-program--with some semi-choreographed
staging by director marion j. caffey--is no opera-fest. they do begin
with "la donna è mobile," "nessun dorma," & "ah mes amis," but
are soon off & running with soul, gospel, rhythm & blues, & showbiz,
including "bring him home" & "being alive."
my favorite was victor robertson, both for his
stage-presence & his interpretation of his songs.
remembering beloved beverly sills
even before the met's opening-night lucia,
this august opera-house saluted another lucia, the late & much lamented
beverly sills. the every-seat-filled tribute to beverly sills
was more a love-in than a tearful memorial.
as beverly had begun her operatic career with
the new york city opera, over at the city center, later becoming the artistic-director
of the nyco at lincoln center, the city opera shared tribute-honors with the
met, where she became a star only after sir rudolf bing was no longer
there to bar her from its stage.
opera-stars placido domingo, anna netrebko,
john relyea, & natalie dessay saluted manhattan's favorite
diva in song. but, thanks to the miracle of videotape, beverly was seen &
heard as well, especially in her tv special with carol burnett--who
also appeared live on stage to remember her friend.
despite unfriendly allegations that mayor
bloomberg is stiff & awkward when he speaks, he was both charming
& amusing in his remembrances of beverly sills, one of new york's biggest
fund-raisers. he opened with: "hi, i'm mike bloomberg!"
best-friend barbara walters & former
nyco intendant & gmd julius rudel also spoke feelingly of their
love for beverly. close-friend henry kissinger was briefly interrupted
by someone in the rear of the orchestra, shouting something about "war criminals,"
but that dissatisfied dissident was ushered from his seat.
most interesting of all, however, were the memories
of bev's brother, stanley sills. many in the audience shared memories
among themselves, as well.
i had interviewed beverly on occasion--once backstage,
between acts, as she was changing her costume!--but there was no reason to
suppose such a great star would remember what used to be called an "ink-stained-wretch."
nonetheless, whenever i chanced to meet her,
she immediately remembered my name & asked how i was feeling health-wise,
as well as what projects i was working-on! what's more, she was always smiling
& supportive: i felt she was really interested in what i was doing.
when we were at conferences or panels, she would
often ask me what i thought about the subjects under discussion. at the world
premiere of dom argento's casanova's homecoming,
at the minnesota opera, in saint paul, she even asked me how i thought it
would fare at lincoln center. although it was being sung in english, i told
her super-titles would be a real mitzvah.
once beverly even starred for me at a drama desk
meeting at sardi's. i had created a panel about the problems involved in playing
a pair of famous queens: elizabeth & mary of scotland. nancy marchand
& salome jens were in schiller's maria stuart at
the vivian beaumont, with eileen atkins & claire bloom on
broadway in robert bolt's vivat! vivat! regina!
but britain's pauline tinsley was making
her manhattan debut at the city opera that very evening, opposite beverly,
also in a bellini-inspired royal-confrontation of the great queens--who actually
never met face-to-face.
beverly immediately accepted my invitation to
take part. pauline was very reluctant, with so much at stake, debuting as
a virtually unknown-quality in new york.
in the event, pauline decided she could not be
absent if beverly was going to be on the panel. soon after, julius rudel called
me with some strong words about not taxing his two stars mere hours before
the premiere. but they both appeared, to general cheers!
90th anniversary for manhattan
school of music!
the admirable manhattan school of music
is only short walk from grant's tomb, up on claremont avenue. it occupies
classrooms & theatres once dedicated to the musical-missions of the juilliard
school--now enlarging its quarters at lincoln center.
the broadway & claremont location is also
near two theological seminaries, columbia university, barnard college, &
rockefeller's cathedral-like riverside church. but--even with its handsome
new performance-spaces, lecture-halls, & residences--it is not exactly
central.
so it chose the historic steinway hall
on west 57th street as the venue for saluting its 90th
anniversary, presenting some of its outstanding students & its fall performance-program.
thomas hampson's manhattan songbook concert is
coming soon.
every fall & spring, full-scale opera-productions
are mounted! lukas foss' griffelkin will be offered
in december. but only for three performances! kurt weill's street
scene is scheduled for spring.
and the public is also invited to master classes
by such talents as kurt masur, catherine malfitano, & the
ageless marta eggert.
manhattan school's opera-theatre grads brandon
jovanovich & jennifer o'loughlin both took the spotlight at
major european festivals this past summer: brandon was one of the cavaradossis
in the bregenz festival's lake-stage tosca. jennifer enjoyed
a success at the salzburg festival, stepping in as susanna at the last minute
for diana damrau, in the elegant claus guth production of mozart's
marriage of figaro!
copyright glenn loney,
2007. no
re-publication or broadcast use without proper credit of authorship. suggested
credit line: "glenn loney, new york theatre wire." reproduction rights please
contact: jslaff@nytheatre-wire.com.
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