Saturday, September 26, 2015

Isolde

Isolde
Theatre for a New Audience
Polonsky Shakespeare Center
September 23, 2015

Photo courtesy of
Theatre for a New Audience
NewYork City PlayersIsolde, a new play written and directed by Richard Maxwell, is playing at Theatre for a NewAudience’s Polonsky Shakespeare Center in downtown Brooklyn until September 27.  It received a lot of attention on social media, so I was excited to get a ticket on TDF.  I found the production disengaging, the style cold, and the ending confusing and unsatisfying.  

Isolde, a famous actress (played by Tory Vazquez), is having trouble with her memory, and decides to take on a new project.  She hires Massimo, an award-winning artist/architect (played by Gary Wilmes) to design her dream house.  Her successful contactor husband, Patrick (played by Jim Fletcher), gives her unquestioned support on her new project, which includes looking the other way when she and Massimo begin an affair.  Patrick eventually takes over completing the dream house when Massimo is unable to follow through on his creative vision, leaving Isolde at a loss.

Jim Fletcher, Gary Wilmes, and Tory Vazquez in Isolde
Photo courtesy of Theatre for a New audience
You would think the triangle love story who lend to a passionate and fiery story, but the actors were all stylistically monotone and robotic.  The way they crossed the stage with their hands at their sides, deliberately lifted and moved chairs from one setting to the other, stood facing front while talking and “relating” to each other, and even the way they held the stems of their wine glasses was all unnatural and irksome.  The plot was relatively simple, yet I was unable to identify what motivated the characters to take action.  This left me feeling ambivalent to the action of the play and unable to empathize or relate to the characters.

Photo courtesy of Theatre for a New Audience
While researching Richard Maxwell, I discovered he is known for his minimalistic roots.  Reviewer David Cote wrote “to any Maxwell newbie, the non sequiturs, cryptic pauses and jarring shifts in tone will seem utterly absurd and weird.”  Reviewer Helen Shaw haled him “the bard of downtown deadpan,” and said that Isolde “is more Chekhovian than operatic.”  I have to agree with those statements.  Chekhov, however, can be engaging, and “absurd and weird” can be interesting.  Due to my first experience, I will probably remain a “Maxwell newbie” for a while longer.


Domenick Danza

Saturday, September 19, 2015

Hamlet in Bed

Hamlet in Bed
Rattlestick Playwrights Theater
September 14, 2015

Photo courtesy of
Rattlestick Playwrights Theater
In the past few years I have seen a handful of shows at Rattlestick Playwrights Theater.  Their space on 224 Waverly Place in the West Village is small and rustic, yet spacious and well maintained.  The work they do is consistently edgy and well developed.  Hamlet in Bed, a new play by Michael Laurence, surpasses the standard with a robust style and unique voice.  It is funny, haunting, and psychologically complex.

Michael (intensely portrayed by playwright Michael Laurence) is a Hamlet-struck actor.  Raised by adopted parents, he is plagued with inner conflict, mostly due to his abandonment issues.  In his quest for all things Hamlet, he comes across a journal written thirty-nine years ago by an actress who once played Ophelia.  Her writings reveal that she had an affair with the actor who played Hamlet opposite her, got pregnant, and gave up the child for adoption.  Yes, the date of birth written in the journal is the same as Michael’s.  He tracks her down and casts her as Gertrude (Hamlet’s mother) in his own version of Hamlet.  He is in constant indecision, as Hamlet is, as to whether or not to confront her with the truth.

Photo by Tristan Fuge
Courtesy of Rattlestick Playwrights Theater
The script is skillfully structured and prolifically written.  It is mostly monologues delivered by the characters of Michael or his mother, Anna (brilliantly played by Annette O’Toole).  Since these monologues reveal the inner workings of the characters’ minds and the desires that drive them, they stylistically identify as Shakespearean soliloquies.  Director Lisa Peterson connects every word to action and builds the play to a strong high point.  The Hamlet-Gertrude scene, performed near the end of the play, is alive with tension and honesty.  It is driven by the desperate longings of Michael and Anna, channeled through the characters of Hamlet and Gertrude.

Annette O'Tolle in Hamlet in Bed
Photo by Tristan Fuge
Courtesy of Rattlestick Playwrights Theater
I could not take my eyes off Annette O’Toole.  The playwright has given her a rich backstory that she fully embodies with physical quirks and emotional depth.  It combines Ophelia’s madness and Gertrude’s denial.  Ms. O’Toole seamlessly transitions from Anna, a sixty year old cat lady who once played Shakespeare on Broadway, to the character of Gertrude, the noble Queen of Denmark.  Neither character can embrace her son, and the expansiveness of her despair in both roles is clear, sincere, and implicit.

The play opens with an extensive monologue from the character of Michael.  We follow his story for ninety minutes.  It has a powerful ending with the character of Anna alone on stage.  This choice begs the question: Whose story is this, Michael’s or Anna’s?  The answer for me: The script is so well balanced with both characters’ points of view that you truly identify with their indecision, and therefore fully comprehend why Hamlet is such a complex character and brilliant classic.  

Michael Laurence in Hamlet in Bed
Photo by Tristan Fuge
Courtesy of Rattlestick Playwrights Theater
Michael Laurence has written a play that explores classic themes and Oedipal nightmares, and makes them relevant and realistic.   He has a strong and powerful voice.  Submerge yourself in Hamlet in Bed.  It plays at Rattlestick Playwrights Theater through October 25. 


Domenick Danza

Monday, September 7, 2015

The Taming of the Shrew

The Taming of the Shrew
The Drilling Company
Bryant Park
September 4, 2015

Photo courtesy of
The Drilling Company
The Drilling Company’s production of The Taming of the Shrew opened at Bryant Park on Friday, September 4.  Director Alessandro Colla’s rendition of this raucous Shakespeare comedy takes place in “Padua by the Sea,” a North Eastern fishing town similar to Amity from the move Jaws.  When Petruchio takes on the challenge of conquering the “great white shark” Kate, the outcome is abundant hilarity and true love.

Eric Paterniani, Alessandro Colla, Eli Branson
Photo by Jonathan Slaff, courtesy of The Drilling Company

In addition to directing, Mr. Colla also takes on the role of Petruchio.  His vision for the play is sharp and his interpretation of the character is impeccable.  He is equally matched and challenged by the fiery Evangeline Melody Fontaine as Kate, the shrew.  Mary Linehan is mischievous and beguiling as Bianca, and Lukas Raphael is charming and sincere as Lucentio.  Eric Paterniani and Eli Branson deliver the laughs as Grumio and Curtis.  The entire cast deserves a shout out: Jarrod Bates, Michael Bernstein, Colleen Cosgrove, Jonathan Eric Foster, Bill Galarno, Brandon Reilly, Jack Sochet, and Mike Taylor.  They work as a team creating strong, appealing characters that make this production of The Taming of the Shrew a winner. 

Evangeline Melody Fontaine, Bill Galarno, Mary Linehan
Photo by Jonathan Slaff, courtesy of The Drilling Company
Jen Varbalow’s set design is clean and simple.  She is able to focus the audience’s attention on the specific locations of the play in the expansive Bryant Park outdoor space.  Anna Grossman’s sound design transports the audience to these locations with updated music and atmospheric effects.

This is the final production of The Drilling Company’s 2015 summer season.  Over the past six months, Artistic Director Hamilton Clancy successfully produced five free outdoor Shakespeare performances in two different locations in the city.  The Taming of the Shrew plays at Bryant Park Fridays and Saturday at 6:30 PM and Sundays at 2:00 PM through September 20.  End the summer on a high note… go see it!  Yes, it is FREE!


Domenick Danza

Friday, September 4, 2015

A Delicate Ship

A Delicate Ship
The Playwrights Realm
Peter Jay Sharp Theatre
August 28, 2015

Photo courtesy of The Playwrights Realm
A Delicate Ship, a new play by Anna Ziegler, is playing at the Peter Jay Sharp Theatre on 42nd Street (Playwrights Horizon on Theatre Row).  It was developed and produced by The Playwrights Realm.  The script makes a strong statement about memory and how certain events can change the course of your life, when proper attention is paid.

Sarah (Miriam Silverman) and her boyfriend Sam (Matt Dellapina) are spending a romantic Christams Eve together, when there is a knock on the door.  Enter Nate (Nick Westrate), a childhood friend of Sarah.  After reminiscing, smoking a joint, drinking some wine, and playing a parlor game that cuts deep, Nate opens up to why he dropped in.  The discomfort comes to an end when Nate is finally asked to leave.  “What if we just hadn’t opened the door?” ask Sarah and Sam a few times during Nate’s visit, but they did.  The bigger question is, “Which event of the evening will affect them the most?”

Nick Westrate, Miriam Silverman, & Matt Dellapina
in A Delicate Ship
Photo courtesy of The Playwrights Realm
All three actors create characters that grab attention.  Their portrayals are realistic and charming.  Ms. Ziegler’s script and Margot Bordelon’s direction breaks the fourth wall intermittently throughout the play.  This is an intriguing convention that suspends time and strengthens the script’s commentary on memory, yet becomes a hindrance to the development of deeper, revealing relationships between the characters.

The set, designed by Reid Thompson, is an interior living room, sparsely and tastefully furnished, surrounded by a lane of gravel on all four sides, which serves as the sidewalk surrounding the exterior of the apartment building.  This is a clever and well-defined way to utilize the space, since in some scenes two characters are inside the apartment at the same time that one of them is outside.

The Playwrights Realm was founded in 2007 and is “dedicated to serving early-career playwrights.”  A Delicate Ship is well produced and the playwright’s voice is strong and distinct.  This is a company worth checking out and supporting.


Domenick Danza

Tuesday, September 1, 2015

Pearl

Pearl
David H. Koch Theater
Lincoln Center
August 29, 2015

Photo courtesy of Pearl
After seeing Daniel Ezralow’s Pearl, I now know what audiences felt when they first saw Martha Graham’s Appalachian Spring or Agnes de Mille's Rodeo.  This work is that kind of monumental.  A full length dance piece “inspired by the life of Pearl S. Buck,” Pearl is enthralling and mesmerizing.  It captures the essence of her experiences and brings you to a clear understanding of how and why she became a prolific writer and great humanitarian.

Photo courtesy of Pearl
Mr.Ezralow structures this work to parallel the famous Chinese poem, Spring, River, Flower, Moon, Night about the cycle of life.  His choreography is lush, powerful, and distinct.  The dancers intertwine in intricate patterns that illustrate relationships and depict emotional connection.  The use of technology and projection enhances the storytelling and impacts the choreography.  Original music by Jun Miyake engages all your senses and gets your heart beating.  The use of Ms. Buck’s words, particularly in the finale, brings a universal connection that makes the entire evening touching and personal.

Photo courtesy of Pearl
Pearl performed at Lincoln Center for only four performances (August 27 – 30).  With a diverse cast of thirty-four powerful dancers, a set including numerous drops, a few large structure, a pool of water, and a turntable, as well as digital projections that fill the extensive height of the stage at the David H. Koch Theater, this production will be difficult to remount or travel.  I hope it was recorded to be aired on PBS at some time in the near future.  Keep an eye out for it.


Domenick Danza