Showing posts with label Patrick Marber. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Patrick Marber. Show all posts

Saturday, December 31, 2022

Leopoldstadt

 Leopoldstadt
Longacre Theatre
December 30, 2022 

Photo courtesy of Leopoldstadt

Tom Stoppard has outdone himself with Leopoldstadt.  The play runs two hours and ten minutes without intermission, and flies by.  The characters are rich and clear, full of vigor and continually standing up for themselves.  They are flawed and real, striving to find their place in the world, while struggling to find their place within their own family.

Photo courtesy of Leopoldstadt

It is 1899.  We meet a very well-off Jewish family living in Vienna.  The children are decorating a Christmas tree.  The adults find it amusing when one of the young boys puts the Star of David on top of the tree.  This is a progressive family, who openly discuss politics, the unjust ways of the world, their Jewish heritage, and the choices some of them made with interfaith marriage.  A few of the women are looking through a photo album.  One of them comments that when a family member dies without a photo, their face is lost forever.  This family looks forward to the turn of the 20th century with optimism, even thought they are well aware of the obstacles and antisemitism they face.

Photo courtesy of Leopoldstadt

The story continues to follow the children and grandchildren of this family through 1924, 1938, and 1955.  Their personal conflicts continue as the political environment in Austria drastically changes, yet their identity remain strong, as they can see in the photo album they carry with them through the decades.

This play has a cast of over twenty phenomenal actors.  Director Patrick Marber keeps the focus sharp through the span of fifty-six years of action, which includes changes of actors as their characters age.  Tom Stoppard’s writing is dense and complex, full of both political commentary and the personal yearnings of the characters.  Mr. Marber and this skilled cast find the through lines of emotion that keep the audience engaged, connected, and on the edge of their seats.  

As in most of Mr. Stoppard’s work, he uses math as a metaphor for the action.  In this piece, it is the cat’s cradle.  The mathematician character ties three knots in string, then shows the children how to play.  He points out the change in location of the knots every time the string changes shape.  These coordinates seem random when looked at independently, yet, as one of the children points out, they are very much determined by the previous position and movement of the string.  This represents the migration of the Jewish people over centuries, never having a land of their own, being forced to move by varied political and social upheaval. 

Photo courtesy of Leopoldstadt

During a political discussions in the 1924 scene, one of the characters asks, “Do you really think it will happen again?”  She is referring to the hatred that keeps the Jewish people persecuted and transitory.  The characters have no idea what is ahead for them.  When we get to the final scene, where three family members are reunited in 1955, they read off the names on their family tree.  They solemnly state the names of their family members who were killed in Auschwitz.  Tom Stoppard gives us pause to identify the hatred that was strongly present int the 20th Century and recognize it is still alive in the 21st.  This profound moment pulls the meaning of this fifty-six year story together.  It is a visceral moment of awareness and a bold statement on the continuous legacy of hatred throughout history.

Leopoldstadt is playing at the Longacre Theatre.  You must see this play!

Domenick Danza

Friday, April 6, 2018

Travesties


Travesties
Roundabout Theatre Company
American Airlines Theatre
April 5, 2018

Photo courtesy of Roundabout Theatre Company
Tom Stoppard’s Travesties is receiving a tremendous revival by Roundabout Theatre Company.  Director Patrick Marber is in sync with Mr. Stoppard’s rhythms and humor.  The cast magnificently delivers the bite in the sarcasm and the punch in the irony.  The political and social commentary is clear and relevant, and makes an even more impressive statement when you realize it was first performed in 1974.


Tom Hollander as Henry Carr
Photo courtesy of Roundabout Theatre Company
Henry Carr (played by Tom Hollander) pieces together the stories from his younger days in 1918 after the war in Zurich, Switzerland.  First there was his acquaintance with Tristan Tzara (played by Seth Numrich), the Romanian radical free thinker who helped find the Dada movement.  Next was the meeting with James Joyce (played by Peter McDonald), while he was writing Ulysses.  Then there was his run-ins with Lenin (played by Dan Butler) at the local library.  The discourse over revolution, socialism, art for art’s sake, and art for social commentary commands the air when these characters collide.  The comedy rises when Gwendolyn (played by Scarlett Strallen) and Cecily (played by Sara Topham) mistake the identities of Henry and Tristan.  This parallels the plot of Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Ernest, a play in which James Joyce convinces Henry to star in. 

Tom Hollander, Dan Butler, Patrick Kerr, Seth Numrich, & Patrick Marber
Photo courtesy of  Walter McBride, Broadway World,
& Roundabout Theatre Company 
Tom Hollander and Seth Numrich are mesmerizing as Henry Carr and Tristan Tzara.  Peter McDonald and Dan Butler boldly embody the characters of James Joyce and Lenin.  Patrick Kerr is underplayed perfection as Bennet, Henry Carr’s butler.  The entire cast works as a tight ensemble.  Their timing is impeccable.  Their physicalities are broad and energetic.  They bring light to Mr. Stoppard’s strong statements about art and humanity, which ring truthfully and vigorously.

The set design by Tim Hatley is full of surprises, allowing for numerous exit and entrance points and a wide variety of levels.  Lighting by Neil Austin is crisp and succinct, and greatly enhances the timing of the humor and the enthusiasm of the absurdity.

Photo courtesy of Roundabout Theatre Company
From the Roundabout Theatre Company program notes:  “A travesty is a ‘debased, distorted, or grossly inferior imitation’ of something; can also be defined as an artistic imitation of something in a ridiculously inappropriate style; Travesties is a travesty of The Importance of Being Ernest and other literary sources; characters in Travesties are travesties of the real people they are based on.”  This production sharply focuses on these four statements, bringing valuable insight to the purpose of art and how our involvement in it makes us human

Travesties is running at the American Airlines Theatre through June 17. 

Domenick Danza