Tag: New York

Theatre Review: "Marry Me A Little"

This is my first exposure to Marry Me a Little, the Sondheim revue conceived by Craig Lucas and Norman Rene in 1980. So, I have no clue about its original form, which seems to be much much loved in certain corners. I like this version just fine – it frames an assortment of lesser-known Sondheim songs with a vague dialogue-free story about two lonely strangers.

Two singles, alone in their New York apartments (a floor away from each other) on a Saturday night, ruminate over romantic hopes, fears and regrets. There’s some hints of sexting and on-line “dating” that I’m fairly sure weren’t in the original, but they don’t detract. Lauren Molina and Jason Tam are definitely appealing, and although they sing well enough, they were clearly cast more for their ability to act a song – a smart move on director Jonathan Silverstein’s part and crucial to putting the plot across as clearly as possible.

Tam and Molina also do a terrific job of communicating that they are in different apartments even though they may be mere inches apart, much aided by Silverstein’s razor-sharp staging. Plus, when their imagination puts them together they have a lovely chemistry, essential to putting over Sondheim’s sophisticated lyrics about the rewards and dangers of romance.

Also very smart is Josh Bradford’s evocative lighting design which clearly delineates the border between reality and imagination (where these dreamers spend a good chunk of time). Steven C. Kemp’s set puts us immediately in a recognizable place – “Her” is a cellist, “Him” a poet, and this looks very much like the Williamsburg apartments of writers and musicians that I know.

Charming, occasionally touching or sweetly funny, this Marry Me a Little isn’t earth-shattering, it’s just a reasonably satisfying evening of musical theatre.

For tickets, click here.

For more reviews and interviews by Jonathan Warman, see dramaqueennyc.com.

Theatre Review: "Ten Chimneys"

I don’t know how “the Lunts” – the most revered married stars of the Broadway stage ever, Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne – would feel about my reaction to Ten Chimneys, playwright Jeffrey Hatcher’s mostly enjoyable comedy set at their Wisconsin estate of the same name. I liked it better when it was closer to the Noël Coward comedies or continental romances that were their most acclaimed success, and liked it a good deal less when Hatcher decided to imitate Anton Chekhov’s The Seagull. The Lunts, you see, were perfectly good classical actors and would like to have been known as such – unfortunately that’s not how their adoring public wanted to see them.

Hatcher’s Chekhovian ambitions arise because the play peers into the backstage lives of the couple during the rehearsal process for a 1938 production of Chekhov’s The Seagull, on their summer retreat. Hatcher rather tediously invents a love triangle involving the Lunts and the young Uta Hagen, which he models on scenes from Chekhov’s play. It’s a conceit that sounds good on paper but doesn’t create any real dramatic traction – the play is much stronger and engaging when it is a simple backstage comedy in the style of Stage Door, or concerns itself with Alfred’s somewhat repressed homosexual leanings.

In all of the play’s various phases, director Dan Wackerman has gotten behind Hatcher 100% – when the writing is light Wackerman goes with that, when it’s heavy he goes that way. While basically an honorable and intelligent approach, this has the unfortunate (and I’m guessing unintentional) effect of highlighting the weakness of the more Chekhov-inspired scenes.

Obviously I think Ten Chimneys is far from perfect. However, if you are a fan of the legend of the Lunts – as I am – or simply of backstage comedy in general, there is actually plenty to enjoy here.

For tickets, click here.

For more reviews and interviews by Jonathan Warman, see dramaqueennyc.com.

Cabaret Review: Betty Buckley

Among the principal pleasures in Betty Buckley’s recent cabaret acts have been clever specialty numbers that poke fun at some aspect or other of the Broadway musical. Her current act at Feinstein’s, “The Other Women: The Vixens of Broadway”, celebrates the second female lead – called the “other woman” in old Broadway slang, and “Featured Actress in a Musical” by today’s Tony Nominating Committees.

So, relatively early in the show, she sings a whip-smart, very funny specialty number called “But Play The Other Woman”, set partially to the melody of “You Gotta Have a Gimmick” from Gypsy. It thoroughly demonstrates how “the other woman” has always received the best, showiest songs over the years. As a matter of fact, the number is so full of vocal fireworks that Betty wondered aloud afterward if it was too early in the act!

From beginning to end, she knocks every song out of the ballpark. Musical director Christian Jacob’s arrangements are complex and lush. In particular, his arrangement of “My Heart Belongs to Daddy” goes so far in a moody, jazzy direction that it takes a little getting used to, but in the end really is luscious.

I don’t think I’ve ever seen Buckley so at ease and whimsical, and it suits her very well. This is the latest in a series of acts that focus on the Broadway songbook, rather than the jazz and art songs that Buckley formerly used to populate her cabaret acts. I think she’s really relaxed into this approach, and is genuinely having fun – which ends up creating a lot of fun for us in the audience, too.

For tickets, click here.

For more reviews and interviews by Jonathan Warman, see his blog Drama Queen.

Theatre Review: "An Enemy of the People"

I read Henrik Ibsen’s An Enemy of the People for the first time a couple of years ago, and it immediately became my favorite Ibsen play. It moves at an exciting clip, and has many comic moments – unusual for the usually highly serious Norwegian playwright. Plus, while Ibsen was often ahead of his time, he was unusually prescient here, shedding an uncompromising light on the dangers of pollution and how money and mediocrity can rapidly corrupt a democracy – sound familiar?

Dr. Thomas Stockmann (played by four time-Tony-winner Boyd Gaines in a nomination-worthy performance) discovers high levels of toxins in the water used in his town’s widely-renowned spa. But since the baths are the town’s main source of revenue, the powers that be array themselves against him with terrifying rapidity.

The dialogue in Rebecca Lenkiewicz’s adaptation is particularly salty – though I wouldn’t be at all surprised if this is truer to Ibsen’s original, since sensibilities weren’t as uptight in 1882 Norway as they were in Victorian England. Certainly, she has more than successfully captured the sharp satirical spirit and almost delirious energy of the play. Stockmann is delighted one minute and devastated the next several times throughout the play. This tragicomedy turns on a dime and just keeps on turning; Lenkiewicz and Gaines both successfully delineate the good Doctor’s roller-coaster ride through controversy in an exciting, compelling way

Director Doug Hughes has turned up the volume on the passion of both the Doctor and the authorities opposing him; Richard Thomas is especially strong as Stockmann’s main opponent (his brother Peter, who also happens to be mayor). I really do love this play, which I can’t say for all of Ibsen, and I am really very satisfied with this production. Highly recommended!

For tickets, click here.

For more reviews and interviews by Jonathan Warman, see dramaqueennyc.com.

Underground Thursday: "Bones" by MS MR

Tomorrow night, Friday, September 28, I will be DJing at the Lush & Lively cocktail hour at the Time Out New York Lounge at New World Stages, 340 West 50th Street (between 8th & 9th Ave) from 6:30 PM to 9:00 PM. I’m switching it up a little bit, since I have discovered a rich vein of orchestral indie pop, like this devastating song from my new favorite band in the world, MS MR. I’ll be playing a bunch of stuff like this, especially from 7 to 7:30pm.

In general, the music at Lush and Lively emphasizes horns and strings, so there will be jazz (classic and “nu”), latin, international orchestral and big band pop and – of course – lots and lots of disco. The Cosmo special is only $3 from 6:30PM to 7:00 PM, and there are $5 drink specials until 9:00 PM.

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