POTUS
Shubert Theatre
May 26, 2022
Photo courtesy of Potus |
POTUS is a raucous
and sidesplitting look at the behind the scenes happening at the White
House. Playwright Selina Fillinger has
written an over the top script filled with funny lines, physical comedy,
truthful characters, and a hilarious premise.
Director Susan Stroman works this cast of brilliant performers into a
frenzy. The action rises as the stress
builds and the laughter culminates to a one line ending that says it all.
During an international meeting, the President of the United States makes a sexist and derogatory remark about his wife, Margaret (played by Vanessa Williams). Harriet, the President’s Chief of Staff (played by Julie White), and his Press Secretary, Jean (played by Suzy Nakamura), are frantically figuring out how to spin it. Stephanie, the President’s secretary (played by Rachel Dratch), is trying to prevent Margaret from seeing the president and making the situation worse. Meanwhile, it is discovered that the president had an affair with a young, blond woman, Dusty (played by Julianne Hough), who is now pregnant with his child. Harriet invited her to the White House to quiet the incident. In addition, the President pardoned his sister, Bernadette (played by Lea Delaria), who was serving a prison sentence for international drug dealing. When a reporter (played by Lilli Cooper), is interviewing the First Lady, she overhears and records the conversations where all this dirty laundry is aired. Mayhem ensues, as Jean takes Margaret’s phone containing the recordings, and an accident takes place that could put all their necks on the chopping block.
Julie White & Suzy Nakamura Photo courtesy of Potus |
Nakamura. These two skilled actors successfully light the fuse, and everything accelerates from there. The set, designed by Beowolf Boritt, is on a turn table that quickly spins to reveal various rooms in the White House. This allows for immediate changes, seamless transitions, and a continual build in the pace and comic timing.
The Full Cast Photo courtesy of Potus |
As funny as this play is, it packs a thoughtful and provocative wallop at the end. Go see it! It is everything you could imagine from this magnificent cast.
Domenick Danza
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