The Babylon Line
Lincoln Center Theatre
At the Mitzi E. Newhouse
December 31, 2016
Photo courtesy of Lincoln Center Theatre |
Lincoln
Center Theatre’s production of The Babylon Line is astounding. Richard
Greenberg’s script is prolific. His
characters are bold, honest, peculiar, and real. Director Terry Kinney finds just the right rhythm and flow for the play
in order to keep the audience focused on the characters, their challenges, and
their connections.
It
is 1967 and Aaron Port (played by Josh Radnor) commutes on the Babylon Line to
teach a creative writing adult education class in Levittown, Long Island. His class is an eclectic mix of six students. He is drawn to one student in particular,
Joan Dellamond (played by Elizabeth Reaser).
She is a bit of an outcast, yet has a promising writing style with a
unique voice. The students in the class
gradually open up in their writing, while the instructor remains separate and
aloof. The class comes to an end, yet
their stories do not.
Photo courtesy of Lincoln Center Theatre |
There
are strong performances by the entire cast.
Josh Radnor is charming and allusive as Aaron Port. Elizabeth Reaser has a quirkiness that is
disturbing and off beat. As the details
of her character are revealed, the depth of these qualities hold true. She grows and changes due to the connection
to Josh Radnor’s’character. Their
honesty and relationship is riveting.
Randy Graff is commanding as Frieda Cohen. Maddie Corman and Julie Halston join with her
in creating a trio of Long Island housewives that are both funny and sad. Perhaps the most amusing touch by Mr.
Greenberg is when he builds Maddie Corman's character into the main character
in his play Our Mother's Brief Affair. Frank Wood and Michael Overholtzer are
brilliantly underplayed and ever present.
These actors all create rich, realistic characters with the specific
backstories in Mr. Greenberg’s script. Their
relationships keep the energy flowing throughout the play.
Photo courtesy of Lincoln Center Theatre |
The
set by Richard Hoover and costumes by Sarah J. Holden strongly establish the
time period and location of the play.
Lighting by David Weiner and sound by Rob Milburn and Michael Bodeen
allow for a consistent tone and smooth transitions. All of this supports Mr. Greenberg’s theme
that the ending of a story is really the beginning.
The Babylon Line is playing at
Lincoln Center Theatre at the Mitzi E. Newhouse through January 22. Time is running out. Get there before it closes.
Domenick Danza
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