Showing posts with label BAM Rose. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BAM Rose. Show all posts

Saturday, July 29, 2017

Angels in America Part Two: Perestroika

Angels in America
Part Two: Perestroika
National Theatre Live
BAM Rose
July 27, 2017
 
Photo courtesy of National Theatre Live
In the National Theatre Live screening of Angels in America Part Two: Perestroika, director Marianne Elliott transports the audience into a world where tenacious characters face their fears and obstacles with the sense of endurance they are prepared to carry forward into the next millennium.  In Part One the set was split into sections where one scene followed another in linear fashion.  In Part Two Ms. Elliott opens up the space so that the scenes overlap, unfold, and weave into one another.  This complements the way Tony Kushner breaks down the structure he sets up in Part One.  The story opens and becomes much more visceral and imaginary.  However, just when you are soaring in the avant-garde, he hits you with the human needs of the characters that bring you back to the truths of the events and frailty of human existence.  

Denise Gough & Andrew Garfield
Photo courtesy of National Theatre Live
My post from July 22 discusses Angels in America Part One: The Millennium Approaches.  The cast masterfully leads the audience through four and a half hours of emotional extremes in Part Two.  Nathan Lane’s portrayal of the ill and dying Roy Cohen evokes layers of pity, despair, compassion, and disdain.  He is riveting.  Andrew Garfield carries the audience through the complexity of Part Two, delivering the audience safely to a state of calm and understanding.  His performance is astounding, impactful, vulnerable, and truthful.  Susan Brown rises in Part Two as Hanna Pitt / Ethel Rosenberg.  She creates these two characters as enduring and persistent with an inner sense of compassion and acceptance.
  
Russell Tovey & James McArdle
Photo courtesy of National Theatre Live
The angels are portrayed as dark and foreboding.  Puppeteers (listed as Angel Shadows) create the wings of the lead angel (played by Amanda Lawrence) and move her around the stage.  These Angel Shadows also roll in the sets and props, shifting and connecting the action of the scenes.  The scene where Prior Walter wrestles with the angel is powerfully staged and emotionally enthralling. As Act III wraps up, Tony Kushner unravels the characters and events and makes clear and profound statements about forgiveness and the desire for life.

Nathan Stewart-Jarrett & Nathan Lane
Photo courtesy of National Theatre Live
Watching Angels in America offers a retrospective view of a very dark time of our not too distant past.  This perspective is very different from the way it framed the events of the day when it was first experienced in 1991, when the millennium was approaching.  Both ways, the message of hope is pervasive and valuable.  Thinking about how we as a country managed to move into the new millennium with a sense of optimism calls for a pause to the fatalistic sense of the present.  When did we abandon our sense of continuity and the inevitability of forward movement?  Prior Walters asks the angels for a sense of hope to propel him forward in his choice, which is to live.  Perhaps this is what we need to get a stronger sense of how to face the day. 

Andrew Garfield
Photo courtesy of National Theatre Live
As I said before, the National Theatre Live is an invaluable opportunity to experience high quality theatre that most of us, until now, have only been able to read about.  Take advantage of these affordable broadcasts and broaden your exposure.  Check out their website (ntlive.nationaltheatre.org.uk) for locations and dates of encore screenings of Angels in America


Domenick Danza

Saturday, July 22, 2017

Angels in America Part One: The Millennium Approaches

Angels in America
Part One: The Millennium Approaches
National Theatre Live
BAM Rose
July 20, 2017
 
Photo courtesy of National Theatre Live 
The National Theatre Live screening of Angels in America Part One: The Millennium Approaches is potent and poignant.  Director Marianne Elliott finds the rhythms in Tony Kushner’s writing, and allows them to build with great momentum.  The cast creates characters and relationships that are genuine, volatile, and relatable.

Tony Kushner subtitles Angels in America as “A Gay Fantasia on National Themes.”  First performed in 1991, the play explores the aids epidemic in the Ronald Regan era through the characters of Prior Walter (played by Andrew Garfield), his boyfriend Louis (played by James McArdle), well known conservative Republican attorney, Roy Cohen (played by Nathan Lane), his protégé, Joe Pitt (played by Russell Tovey), and Joe’s wife, Harper (played by Denise Gough).  Mr. Kushner’s juxtaposition of a gay couple, a Mormon couple (Joe and Harper Pitt), and conservative Republican values opens the door for political and moral issues of the time to be aired and debated.  Roy Cohen is sick with aids and haunted by the spirit of Ethel Rosenberg (played by Susan Brown).  Historically, Mr. Cohen was influential on Ethel Rosenberg’s death penalty decision.  Prior Walter, also sick with aids, is visited by his ancestors and the great profit, who has a message for the new millennium.

Andrew Garfield as Prior Walter
Photo courtesy of National Theatre
Andrew Garfield is deeply grounded and enveloped in his physical choices for the character of Prior Walter.  He is transformed.  His performance is honest and real.  Nathan Lane is strong as Roy Cohen.  He masterfully nails the humor, the coldness, and the magnitude of this character.  Denise Gough creates a Harper Pitt who is lost in addiction and delusion.  She makes the truth in Tony Kushner’s words ring with clarity and power.  James McArdle is perfectly neurotic and torn as Louis, offering insight into the emotional turmoil of the time.  Russell Tovey effectively portrays Joe Pitt as steadfast on the outside and tragically crumbling on the inside.

Nathan lane as Roy Cohen
Photo courtesy of National Theatre
The National Theatre Live is an invaluable opportunity to experience high quality theatre that most of us, until now, have only been able to read about.  Take advantage of these affordable broadcasts and broaden your exposure and limitations.  Check out their website (ntlive.nationaltheatre.org.uk) for screening locations and dates.  Angels in America Part Two: Perestroika will be shown at BAM Rose on Thursday, July 27 at 7:00 PM.  Visit their website for tickets (www.bam.org/#Theater), and be sure to check back here next week for a posting.


Domenick Danza

Tuesday, February 24, 2015

The Met Live in HD at BAM




Tchaikovsky’s Iolanta and Bartok’s Bluebeard’s Castle
Saturday, February 14, 2015

I broke my regular Saturday routine, which consists of prepping my class lessons for the week, then going to the theatre in the evening.  My friend Julia recommended I put off my school work for one day, since it President’s Day Weekend.  She wanted to go to IKEA, but I suggested we go to see the Met Live in HD at BAM.  It was a double feature, Tchaikovsky’s Iolanta and Bartok’s Bluebeard’s Castle.

Photo courtesy of Met Live in HD
I am not a big opera fan, but watching the production in HD on the big screen has its advantages.  The interviews with the stage director (Mariusz Trelinski), the conductor (Valery Gregiev), and the stars (Anna Netrebko, Piotr Beczala, Nadja Michael, and Mikhail Petrenko) during intermission (on screen, or course) gave a deeper insight into the juxtaposition of the two one-act operas.  The production was inspired by the classic noir films of the 1940s.  Both stories are fairy tales.  Iolanta explores the coming into the light of a young woman as she finds her true love.  Bluebeard’s Castle delves into the dark side of love as Judith, the main character, becomes victimized by her circumstances.  The performances were moving, engaging, and intense.  The through line of images and color, props and lighting from the first opera to the second illustrated the extension of theme that Mariusz Trelinski identified in his interview.  These images along with the interview details allowed me to follow the character and theme development from the Iolanta’s fairy tale happy ending to the darker metaphors in Bluebeard’s Castle.  


The always enthralling communal experience of any theatrical endeavor is why I attend every weekend.  Upon entering, Julia mentioned how we were among the youngest members of the audience.  That was an interesting thing for her to notice, especially since there is a 30 year difference between her age and mine.  I did wonder why the showing was not in one of the cinemas on the first floor of the BAM Rose.  It would have made it a lot easier for a majority of the audience, since there were no elevators or easy access to the theatre.  After we found seats, Julia pointed out the turquoise knit sweater sticking out of the coat sleeve or the elderly gentleman seated to her left.


“It makes me think there’s a whole other personality under his conservative exterior," Julia said.

We laughed as I told her I was in an elbow battle with the man seated to my right, he claimed the arm rest before we arrived and proceeded to inch his elbow into my side all the way through Iolanta. 

Julia had a great conversation with the turquoise sweater man on her left during the intermission.  He was telling her that he and his wife used to go to the Met often and sit in the dress circle.  They could not see the faces of the singers, but were happy to hear and experience the music and voices.  He continued to tell her how much he prefers the Met in HD presentations.  He said it is a more personal experience, since he can see the singers’ expressions, the acting nuances, and production detail up close.  I definitely agree with him.  Between the close-ups and the English subtitles, the Met in HD is a truly engaging experience. 

Clearly, Julia lucked out with the communal experience.  I, on the other hand, continued to sit with my elbows glued to my sides as the man to my left spread out across the arm rest during Bluebeard’s Castle.  Some people just need to get out more.

“So,” I said to Julia as we walked out of BAM into the lightly falling snow, “this is what people do on a Saturday afternoon.”

“Yes,” she replied, “and it’s only 4:20.”

Be sure to take in on of the upcoming Met Live in HD presentations at BAM on one of the following Saturdays:  March 14 and April 25.  When I got to the box office about an hour and a half before show time, I bought the last two tickets that were available, so I recommend getting your tickets ahead of time. 

Domenick Danza