Soul Doctor is not the greatest show on the planet, for sure, but it's certainly not the worst, either--and while there are problems with the show that have been cited repeatedly by critics and other bloggers, I found myself enjoying it immensely nonetheless.
Shlomo Carlebach might not be a household name (at least not in non-Orthodox Jewish households, or in households that are even a few miles from the Carlebach Shul on West 79th Street), but his approach to synagogue worship was both revolutionary and enormously influential. An early Schneerson follower, he was prominent in the baal teshuvah movement (in which a comparatively secular Jew "turns" toward Orthodoxy), and instrumental (pun intended) in infusing the contemporary worship service with music. If you've ever been to a synagogue service--whether Orthodox, Conservative, Reconstructionist, or Reform--in which congregants sing ecstatically, dance in the aisles, and intone extensive niggunim (Hasidic chants), you've likely witnessed Carlebach's influence whether you knew it or not. A devout Jew who devoted his life to outreach through music, Carlebach would seem to serve naturally as a central character in a musical.
Cookies
Monday, August 26, 2013
Sunday, August 25, 2013
Old Familiar Faces
The real-life siblings Mary and Charles Lamb lived in the 1800s in London and wrote together. The fictional (but-somewhat-based-on-Vivien-Leigh-and-Laurence-Olivier) Lee and Oliver are former lovers in present-day New York. The four personae share an intense love of Shakespeare. Perhaps more importantly, the four share the play Old Familiar Faces, written and directed by Nat Cassidy and late of the Fringe Festival.
Old Familiar Faces cannot help but bring to mind Tom Stoppard's Arcadia, as the characters overlap in scenes and interests from century to century. But the comparison isn't quite apt; where Stoppard connects his characters in location and history, Cassidy connects his in language and sensibilities.
Language is the play's raison d'etre. Combining quotations from Shakespeare and his own blank verse, Cassidy presents us with much that is beautiful and moving. To combine his own writing with Shakespeare's takes, what?, daring, courage, ego, balls? But Cassidy pulls it off, and the play is an aural pleasure.
Cassidy also presents us with three fascinating characters. Mary Lamb is seriously mentally ill; in a past attack of insanity, she stabbed her mother to death (true story!). Her brother cares for her and tries to make her life bearable, at obvious cost to his own. But while their lives as people are painful, their lives as writers challenge and fulfill them. They seem truly happy only when discussing their Tales From Shakespeare and what might go into the next volume. It is an odd, sad, emotional sibling love story.
Oliver is snarky, self-pitying, difficult, immature, mean, smart, and funny. He definitely gets some of the best lines in the play, as in:
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| Tandy Cronyn, Sam Sam Tsoutsouvas |
Language is the play's raison d'etre. Combining quotations from Shakespeare and his own blank verse, Cassidy presents us with much that is beautiful and moving. To combine his own writing with Shakespeare's takes, what?, daring, courage, ego, balls? But Cassidy pulls it off, and the play is an aural pleasure.
Cassidy also presents us with three fascinating characters. Mary Lamb is seriously mentally ill; in a past attack of insanity, she stabbed her mother to death (true story!). Her brother cares for her and tries to make her life bearable, at obvious cost to his own. But while their lives as people are painful, their lives as writers challenge and fulfill them. They seem truly happy only when discussing their Tales From Shakespeare and what might go into the next volume. It is an odd, sad, emotional sibling love story.
Oliver is snarky, self-pitying, difficult, immature, mean, smart, and funny. He definitely gets some of the best lines in the play, as in:
You are insanely beautiful, you know that? Like, literally, Nietzsche-stare-into-the-abyss insane. You have the single most perfect ears. These little spirals that would make Fibonacci cry. Even this little thing here, what is it, a scar? It’s so perfect it’s unfair to the rest of the world, it’s almost treason. You should be beaten to death in the square for how beautiful you are. Where’d you get this little scar?
Monday, August 19, 2013
Lombardi Case 1975
My ten-year-old daughter, a native New Yorker, is occasionally bummed that we don't have space for a dog, that she has to share a bedroom with her little brother, and that we don't yet let her go too terribly far from our apartment without adult supervision. But otherwise, New York suits her just fine. She has been exposed to every culture and language you can imagine (and maybe some you can't). She's been to the Met, to Broadway, to the MOMA, and to Carnegie Hall many times (even though she never practices). She has developed a genuinely convincing menacing stare. She has heard and is unperturbed by the filthiest language you can come up with, practically since birth, whether on the street, in the subway, or, let's face it, out of her mother's mouth (I can't help it--I suspect I'd be able to make Ethel Merman blush). She is, in short, not easily phased by anything (except flying insects, but that's another story, and one that only bolsters my argument that she's a city mouse through and through).
I mention all this as a means for justifying the fact that when I got an offer to see LiveInTheater's Lombardi Case 1975--in which actors reenact a composite of several particularly seamy murder cases investigated on the drug-addled Lower East Side during the 970s--I promptly invited my kid along to see it, even though the description on the website, which you can read here, makes it clear that the show is rated R. Don't get me wrong: I was a little hesitant about bringing her, and I did plenty of explaining before we got on the subway and headed up to Ludlow Street. "This is a show about a murder, and it's set during a really rough time in New York's history, so the characters will probably talk a lot about drugs and sex and violence, and will probably use some pretty harsh language, but I think you'll be able to handle it," I told her, probably a few times more than I needed to. She shrugged, told me she was game, put on a sequined tank top that she deemed fancy enough for the theater, and then bitched about having to ride the subway from Brooklyn to lower Manhattan, and then about having to walk from the subway station to the Living Room, a whole four blocks away.
The Living Room, a bar with a small theater in the back, served as our meeting place. We took our seats at one of the small cocktail tables and were quickly approached by Officer O'Donnelly, who asked us repeatedly if we were ready to help solve the case. As more spectators began to trickle in, I noted that the audience was among the most ethnically and racially diverse group of spectators I think I've ever seen (seriously, Broadway, what the fuck? You should study this troupe, because damn if they don't do a good job of bringing representatives from just about the whole damn city together in ways that you still just don't). I also noticed--not as quickly as my daughter did--that she was the only kid in the room. "I sorta wish I'd invited someone to come with me," she mumbled, a few minutes before the show started. We sat tight, despite our misgivings. We're both so glad we did.
I mention all this as a means for justifying the fact that when I got an offer to see LiveInTheater's Lombardi Case 1975--in which actors reenact a composite of several particularly seamy murder cases investigated on the drug-addled Lower East Side during the 970s--I promptly invited my kid along to see it, even though the description on the website, which you can read here, makes it clear that the show is rated R. Don't get me wrong: I was a little hesitant about bringing her, and I did plenty of explaining before we got on the subway and headed up to Ludlow Street. "This is a show about a murder, and it's set during a really rough time in New York's history, so the characters will probably talk a lot about drugs and sex and violence, and will probably use some pretty harsh language, but I think you'll be able to handle it," I told her, probably a few times more than I needed to. She shrugged, told me she was game, put on a sequined tank top that she deemed fancy enough for the theater, and then bitched about having to ride the subway from Brooklyn to lower Manhattan, and then about having to walk from the subway station to the Living Room, a whole four blocks away.
The Living Room, a bar with a small theater in the back, served as our meeting place. We took our seats at one of the small cocktail tables and were quickly approached by Officer O'Donnelly, who asked us repeatedly if we were ready to help solve the case. As more spectators began to trickle in, I noted that the audience was among the most ethnically and racially diverse group of spectators I think I've ever seen (seriously, Broadway, what the fuck? You should study this troupe, because damn if they don't do a good job of bringing representatives from just about the whole damn city together in ways that you still just don't). I also noticed--not as quickly as my daughter did--that she was the only kid in the room. "I sorta wish I'd invited someone to come with me," she mumbled, a few minutes before the show started. We sat tight, despite our misgivings. We're both so glad we did.
Tuesday, August 13, 2013
Love's Labour's Lost
Love and the fools it makes of us sets the background for The
Public Theater’s world premiere of a new musical version of Love’s Labour’s Lost, the second show of
The Public’s 2013 free Shakespeare in the Park season at the Delacorte. The
90-minute musical opened yesterday.
The team that created Bloody
Bloody Andrew Jackson, Alex Timbers (director and book adaptation) and
Michael Friedman (songs) takes one of Shakespeare’s lesser known plays and remakes
it into a story about the rekindling of relationships at a liberal arts
college’s reunion, done Vaudevillian style. Besides adding some cleverly
fashioned tunes, the team trims down some of Shakespeare’s dialogue while
beefing up the women’s roles, creating more nuanced characters. Some of this
works well: Jaquenetta, for instance, played by the wonderful Rebecca Naomi
Jones (Murder Ballad and American Idiot) appears world-weary and
wistful in the knockout ballad, “Love’s a Gun.”
The main story tells of a three-year chastity pledge a group
of young men make while pursing intellectual insight. As soon as the King of
Navarre (Daniel Breaker) and his three friends – Berowne (Colin Donnell),
Longaville (Bryce Pinkham) and Dumaine (Lucas Near-Verbrugghe) grudgingly make
their promises, like a madcap bachelorette party, four girls arrive to tempt
them: Princess (Patti Murin) and best buds Rosaline (Maria Thayer), Maria
(Kimiko Glenn), Katharine (Audrey Lynn Weston).
The addition of music both dilutes Shakespeare’s verse and
makes it more accessible. Many of the lyrics appropriate the original prose, and
all the songs intimate a wink-wink sense that the audience is in on a joke; as
when the boys sing “Young Men” with such foreshadowing lyrics as, “Young men
are supposed to be callow and cavalier about things that later they will have
to think are important.” The best line of the night references the Public’s
free summer theater, itself, with one character musing: “Rich people. They pay
for better seats in plays that should be free.”
Love’s Labour’s Lost,
both heartfelt and zany, appropriates many musical styles, from Madrigals to
doo-whop, and pays homage to popular Broadway shows such as A Chorus Line (with a terrific sneaker
tap worthy of Savion Glover) and Grease (in
a Shakespearean teen angel number). But the impact of the play’s ending is
diminished in exchange for hilarity and over-the-top parlor tricks as an entire
marching band plays its way Music Man style
on stage (a huge budget expense for a little laugh) and a slinky cat dances amidst
the crowd in a random Andrew Lloyd Webber homage.
Sometimes it seems that more surgical cutting might benefit
the musical. After all, Love’s Labour’s
Lost, like much of Shakespeare’s works, remains a carnival of activity.
Besides the ins and outs of five potential relationships, the play balances
multiple themes—the flirtation between the frivolity of youth and the
responsibility of adulthood, the role knowledge contains in having a well-lived
life, the rich versus the poor—and several subplots. Simply some things don’t
fit after all the musical numbers are added, such as the periodic appearance of
pedantic professors and a bumbling local cop. The sideshow of Holofernes
(Rachel Dratch) and Nathaniel (Jeff Hiller) may offer a reason to have the
concluding pageant that wraps up the show yet both performers seem so dreadfully
underutilized that their removal from the action might benefit the musical.
Armado (a deliciously hapless and out-of-his-mind-with-love Caesar Samayoa)
could have continued that subplot by himself.
The scenic design by John Lee Beatty exploits the outdoor
setting and uses the looming Belvedere Castle as a background university
building. Also from the Bloody team
is choreographer Danny Mefford, who keeps things high-spirited, the boorish academic
Hiller and the multi-tasking Justin Levin (Moth/music
director/co-orchestrator).
Ultimately, the trim hour and 40 minute show, with no
intermission, provides frolic and fun. Like a summer romance, though, it charms
and beguiles without long-term engagement.
Runs through August 18.
Tuesday, July 30, 2013
I'm Getting My Act Together and Taking It on the Road
When Gretchen Cryer and Nancy Ford's musical I'm Getting My Act Together and Taking It on the Road opened at the Public in 1978, the theater critics who reviewed it were hostile. (The enormously ironic exception was the typically cranky John Simon,who wrote one of the show's most effusive, supportive reviews.) Walter Kerr started his review of the show by complaining about how stupid and pointless that whole pesky women's lib thing struck him, and then focused in on how unattractive he thought Gretchen Cryer, who originated the lead character, Heather, was, and how sloppy he thought her outfit looked. A number of other critics (most, but not all of them, male) were somewhat less nasty, but nonetheless used their reviews as springboards for criticism of the second wave with astounding regularity. Cryer and Ford assumed that, with such negative reception, their producer, Joe Papp, would close the show. This was especially the case since Papp had gone on record about the fact that he wasn't an enormous fan of the show, at least at first--it just wasn't angry enough for him. But when he saw the reviews, he got angry. Convinced that there was an audience for Getting My Act Together, he not only refused to listen to the critics, but he also pumped more money than he'd intended into advertising and marketing the show. This was a very smart move, by a very smart dude who was perhaps not fully liberated, but was certainly working on it harder than Walter Kerr was.
Sunday, July 28, 2013
Nobody Loves You
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| Rory O'Malley, Bryan Fenkhart, Autumn Hurlbert, Lauren Molina, Roe Hartrampf, Heath Calvert |
(second row center; subscription ticket)
I'm Getting My Act Together and Taking It on the Road
Last night, I visited an old friend who I hadn't seen in decades. The friend was I'm Getting My Act Together and Taking It on the Road, and the reunion was lovely.
I'm Getting My Act Together and Taking It on the Road takes place in the late 1970s during the rehearsal of Heather Jones' new show. Famous as a soap opera actress, she has decided that honest self-expression is more important than image, and has written a completely honest show. Her manager, friend, and ex-fling Joe does not support and cannot begin to understand this decision. And he is downright horrified by her take on male-female relationships.
I was an usher on the original production, and I have no idea how many times I saw the show. I know I saw it starring Gretchen Cryer (who also wrote the book and lyrics), Nancy Ford (who wrote the music), Betty Buckley, and Virginia Vestoff in the lead role as Heather. I saw the first preview, the opening night, and the final performance. And I loved it. It's hard to explain what it felt like in 1978 to see and hear a contemporary woman's point of view on stage. It was thrilling. And in a musical too! It felt kinda miraculous.
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| Renée Elise Goldsberry |
I'm Getting My Act Together and Taking It on the Road takes place in the late 1970s during the rehearsal of Heather Jones' new show. Famous as a soap opera actress, she has decided that honest self-expression is more important than image, and has written a completely honest show. Her manager, friend, and ex-fling Joe does not support and cannot begin to understand this decision. And he is downright horrified by her take on male-female relationships.
I was an usher on the original production, and I have no idea how many times I saw the show. I know I saw it starring Gretchen Cryer (who also wrote the book and lyrics), Nancy Ford (who wrote the music), Betty Buckley, and Virginia Vestoff in the lead role as Heather. I saw the first preview, the opening night, and the final performance. And I loved it. It's hard to explain what it felt like in 1978 to see and hear a contemporary woman's point of view on stage. It was thrilling. And in a musical too! It felt kinda miraculous.
The Past Is Still Ahead
How did I respond to The Past Is Still Ahead, written and directed by Sophia Romma, at the Midtown International Theatre Festival? Let me count the ways: I thought it was brave, moving, intense, smart, overdone, kinda laughable, and kinda wonderful. Mostly, I admired it. I admired the work and love that went into it. I admired the sheer commitment of it.
But let's back up a bit. The Past Is Still Ahead gives us Russian poet Marina Tsvetaeva, exiled in Siberia after a life of terrible loss, much of it at the hands of the Soviets (One daughter starved to death; the other was arrested; her husband was arrested and executed.)
Now on the verge of suicide, Tsvetaeva is examining her life, loves, and work. In a way, she is justifying herself to us, the audience, explaining her treatment of her children, her mistrust of her mother, her affairs, her life, her devotion to her writing above all else. She tells us stories, she corresponds with Rainer Maria Rilke, she argues with her mother, she is visited by an apparition billed as "Mariana's muse and spiritual alter-ego" (but who comes across as death), she is interrogated by the NKVD (the forerunner of the KGB).
| Alice Bahlke Photo: Jonathan Slaff |
Now on the verge of suicide, Tsvetaeva is examining her life, loves, and work. In a way, she is justifying herself to us, the audience, explaining her treatment of her children, her mistrust of her mother, her affairs, her life, her devotion to her writing above all else. She tells us stories, she corresponds with Rainer Maria Rilke, she argues with her mother, she is visited by an apparition billed as "Mariana's muse and spiritual alter-ego" (but who comes across as death), she is interrogated by the NKVD (the forerunner of the KGB).
Thursday, July 25, 2013
Cirque du Soleil - Quidam in Brooklyn
Do you suppose the performers in the Cirque du Soleil are actually human? For much of Quidam, I was convinced that they are stunning aliens visiting us from some magical realm where gravity can be bent, strength is magnified, life happens at double-speed or in slow motion, and the air is made of oxygen and grace.
Of course, they probably are actually human, and yet they turn the Barclays Center into a place where, yes, gravity can be bent, strength is magnified, life happens at double-speed or in slow motion, and the air is made of oxygen and grace.
Consider Cory Sylvester on the German Wheel, which is a sort of free-moving hamster wheel. Sometimes he's stretched inside with his torso as the axle and his limbs as the spokes. Other times he's curled up along the edge, or even standing inside, hands free, as the wheel spins round and round. He controls the wheel's every move, and it must require perfectly coordinated, often subtle use of every single muscle he has. Yet he does it with ease, seemingly, and it's exhilarating fun to watch.
Or consider "Skipping Ropes." Skipping rope, right? We've all skipped rope. But not like that. Whether it's individuals skipping at the speed of light or dozens of people weaving in and out in the most amazing square dance you could(n't) imagine, the act is a complete delight.
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| Yves Décoste, Valentyna Sidenko |
Consider Cory Sylvester on the German Wheel, which is a sort of free-moving hamster wheel. Sometimes he's stretched inside with his torso as the axle and his limbs as the spokes. Other times he's curled up along the edge, or even standing inside, hands free, as the wheel spins round and round. He controls the wheel's every move, and it must require perfectly coordinated, often subtle use of every single muscle he has. Yet he does it with ease, seemingly, and it's exhilarating fun to watch.
Or consider "Skipping Ropes." Skipping rope, right? We've all skipped rope. But not like that. Whether it's individuals skipping at the speed of light or dozens of people weaving in and out in the most amazing square dance you could(n't) imagine, the act is a complete delight.
Monday, July 22, 2013
Shameless self-promotion time: A review of "Hard Times"
Hi:
There will be more theater reviews from me in the coming weeks (whether you want them or not!). In the meantime, I wanted to share the fact that the American Music Review newsletter, which comes out of the truly wonderful H. Wiley Hitchcock Institute for Studies in American Music (ISAM to those of us in the biz...and by "biz" I mean scholars devoted to the study of some aspect of American music), has reviewed Hard Times and given it a review that has really made my Monday.
The link to the whole issue is here.
And the link to the review is here.
It is a lovely newsletter--please be sure to check out the entire institute, if you're interested. And if you have yet to get yourself a copy of Hard Times, give it a try, won't you? Apparently, it's "superbly written" and "expertly researched"! I am so, so relieved to hear this!
Sunday, July 21, 2013
Pina (movie review)
The website for the movie Pina says, "Pina
Bausch [was] a legendary dancer and choreographer.
Her unique creations transformed the language of dance
and offer a visual experience like no other."
This is a rare case where the hype is insufficient. Bausch's choreography offers an emotional, visceral experience like no other. Even in a 2D DVD, she, her work, and her dancers burst into space, challenging, caressing, frightening, thrilling, heartbreaking, wry, strong, graceful, and truly, deeply amazing. Her brilliant and brave performers seemingly risk their lives and occasionally their sanity for her, and in the movie's brief interviews, they speak of her with awe and grief (sadly, she died suddenly just before the movie began filming).
Pina is a breathtaking, electrifying work of art.
But don't take my word for it . . .
This is a rare case where the hype is insufficient. Bausch's choreography offers an emotional, visceral experience like no other. Even in a 2D DVD, she, her work, and her dancers burst into space, challenging, caressing, frightening, thrilling, heartbreaking, wry, strong, graceful, and truly, deeply amazing. Her brilliant and brave performers seemingly risk their lives and occasionally their sanity for her, and in the movie's brief interviews, they speak of her with awe and grief (sadly, she died suddenly just before the movie began filming).
Pina is a breathtaking, electrifying work of art.
But don't take my word for it . . .
Saturday, July 06, 2013
Potted Potter
Please welcome guest blogger Emma-Caster Dudzick.
As an avid Harry Potter fan, Potted Potter sounded to me like an impossible feat: presenting all seven J.K. Rowling books in only 70 minutes. However, I was very excited to see how they’d do it.
Once it started, I was a bit disappointed. The show was more about the two men involved, the writers, Dan and Jeff. They riffed off each other and played their jobs as funny and straight man, respectively. Though they did this well, I felt a little cheated. For a show promising a summation of the great stories of Harry Potter it didn’t actually contain much Potter.
However, once I realized the true nature of the show, and what the format would actually be, I began to enjoy myself immensely, as Dan and Jeff are actually quite talented performers, and their ability to stay quick and fun is very impressive. And watching the reactions they got from the audience was an added bonus: everyone LOVED it.
Perhaps a re-branding of the show would prevent further disappointments from other Harry fanatics like me, but other than that, this is a great show for kids, and not a bad one for adults.
(free ticket; rear orchestra)
As an avid Harry Potter fan, Potted Potter sounded to me like an impossible feat: presenting all seven J.K. Rowling books in only 70 minutes. However, I was very excited to see how they’d do it.
Once it started, I was a bit disappointed. The show was more about the two men involved, the writers, Dan and Jeff. They riffed off each other and played their jobs as funny and straight man, respectively. Though they did this well, I felt a little cheated. For a show promising a summation of the great stories of Harry Potter it didn’t actually contain much Potter.
However, once I realized the true nature of the show, and what the format would actually be, I began to enjoy myself immensely, as Dan and Jeff are actually quite talented performers, and their ability to stay quick and fun is very impressive. And watching the reactions they got from the audience was an added bonus: everyone LOVED it.
Perhaps a re-branding of the show would prevent further disappointments from other Harry fanatics like me, but other than that, this is a great show for kids, and not a bad one for adults.
(free ticket; rear orchestra)
Thursday, July 04, 2013
Buyer & Cellar
I guess that Barbra Streisand is a legitimate target of satirists and imitators. It's not as though she simply does her acting and directing and retires to her quiet life. She has put herself out there in many ways, the most relevant to Jonathan Tolins' charming but slightly icky Buyer & Cellar being her coffee table book, My Passion For Design, a tribute to Streisand's home decorating skills, written and photographed by, yes, Streisand herself. One of the topics of the book is the basement "street of stores" that Streisand built to contain many of her very-many belongings, and the topic of Buyer & Cellar is the fictional actor Alex who gets a job running her real-yet-unreal shops.
Tolin uses this setup to present a lonely, funny, self-centered, manipulative, slightly nuts Streisand and to depict her growing-but-ill-fated friendship with Alex (played, as are all the characters, by the talented, funny, likeable Michael Urie). And as I look at the previous sentence, I realize why I had a clearly different experience of the show than the happily hysterical audience. The show is about Alex's friendship with Streisand, not Streisand's friendship with Alex, but I identified, at least a bit, with Streisand. Even as Urie played her with a slightly Norma Desmond twist to his shoulders, I saw and felt things from her point of view.
Tolin uses this setup to present a lonely, funny, self-centered, manipulative, slightly nuts Streisand and to depict her growing-but-ill-fated friendship with Alex (played, as are all the characters, by the talented, funny, likeable Michael Urie). And as I look at the previous sentence, I realize why I had a clearly different experience of the show than the happily hysterical audience. The show is about Alex's friendship with Streisand, not Streisand's friendship with Alex, but I identified, at least a bit, with Streisand. Even as Urie played her with a slightly Norma Desmond twist to his shoulders, I saw and felt things from her point of view.
Sunday, June 30, 2013
Burning Bright (Broadway Theatre Archives): DVD Review
If you never had the amazing experience of seeing Colleen Dewhurst perform live, you can get a taste of how wonderful she was through the magic of technology. In 1959, John Steinbeck's Burning Bright was presented as a TV Play of the Week, and the Broadway Theatre Archives released it as a DVD in 2003. The play is overwritten and mediocre. The tape is black-and-white and raspy and very low tech. None of that matters: this is a gift.
In Burning Bright, Dewhurst plays Mordeen, a woman married to, and very much in love with, an older man who is unable to father children. She swears again and again that she would do anything to make him happy, and she's not kidding.
Steinbeck wrote the play in a hyper-lyricism that is short on contractions and has even less to do with how real people talk; his characters would be comfortable in an Odets play. Myron McCormick (as Mordeen's husband Joe Saul), Dana Elcar (as Joe Saul's best friend), and Donald Madden (as the young stud who is, of course, trouble) sound like they are reciting poetry and not that well. Dewhurst, on the other hand, manages to make Steinbeck's turgid and obvious dialogue sound real and meaningful and emotional and true. She plays an actual human with actual human desires and fears, despite the mediocre writing. The play isn't particularly well-directed by Curt Conway, but he is smart enough to focus on Dewhurst's face in long takes while other people talk to/at her. These moments are gems in which her brilliance shines through.
If, like me, you only know Dewhurst's later work, it is a treat to see her at age 35, beautiful, sexy, and, as always, powerful. With her voice not yet deepened by cigarettes, and her face unlined, she is a different Dewhurst than she was in the 1970s and later. She is more accessibly vulnerable, a little less of a force of nature. But she is Dewhurst.
(I will never take technology for granted; it still feels miraculous to press a button and have perhaps my favorite actress appear in my living room 54 years after her performance was taped--and 21 years after her much-too-early death).
(DVD from Netflix)
In Burning Bright, Dewhurst plays Mordeen, a woman married to, and very much in love with, an older man who is unable to father children. She swears again and again that she would do anything to make him happy, and she's not kidding.Steinbeck wrote the play in a hyper-lyricism that is short on contractions and has even less to do with how real people talk; his characters would be comfortable in an Odets play. Myron McCormick (as Mordeen's husband Joe Saul), Dana Elcar (as Joe Saul's best friend), and Donald Madden (as the young stud who is, of course, trouble) sound like they are reciting poetry and not that well. Dewhurst, on the other hand, manages to make Steinbeck's turgid and obvious dialogue sound real and meaningful and emotional and true. She plays an actual human with actual human desires and fears, despite the mediocre writing. The play isn't particularly well-directed by Curt Conway, but he is smart enough to focus on Dewhurst's face in long takes while other people talk to/at her. These moments are gems in which her brilliance shines through.
If, like me, you only know Dewhurst's later work, it is a treat to see her at age 35, beautiful, sexy, and, as always, powerful. With her voice not yet deepened by cigarettes, and her face unlined, she is a different Dewhurst than she was in the 1970s and later. She is more accessibly vulnerable, a little less of a force of nature. But she is Dewhurst.
(I will never take technology for granted; it still feels miraculous to press a button and have perhaps my favorite actress appear in my living room 54 years after her performance was taped--and 21 years after her much-too-early death).
(DVD from Netflix)
Thursday, June 27, 2013
Once
About two years ago, I resolved to refuse, on principle, to see any stage musical that was originally a movie. I've decided to back down from this noble (read: foolhardy) boycott in recent months, not only because there are so many musicalized films at this point that it's hard to keep track of what was once a movie and what wasn't (case in point: I saw Kinky Boots having not realized it was a film first, thereby breaking my own rule without even knowing it), but also because many people--colleagues, friends, students--have gently, politely, patiently pointed out that I'm being a real moron about the whole thing. In the first place, the argument went, just because something was once a movie doesn't automatically mean that it is not worth seeing on a stage. And in the second place, I am a scholar who ostensibly specializes in contemporary stage musicals, so refusing to see an increasingly wide swatch of them simply because I am a pill is idiotic. Finally, to be perfectly honest, I can see that I am wasting a lot of energy in swimming against the tide: why rage against poor, suffering, innocent little shows like The Lion King or Newsies when there are so many legitimate causes in the world?
So I relented. I'm in talks with my ten-year-old daughter to see Newsies at some point soon. I will probably suck it up and see Rocky when it lands in New York (though, still, the thought of Bull Durham as a stage musical makes me want to cut somebody). And yesterday, I finally caught a matinee of Once.
I saw, and very much enjoyed the movie version of Once, which was yet one more reason I was so resistant to seeing it on stage. For the other reasons, I can refer you back to paragraph one: I am unbelievably stubborn, I continue to fret a great deal about how derivative stage musicals can be and what that means for the form, and I thus couldn't justify coughing up over a hundred bucks to see something I knew I'd be judging and bitching about the whole time. But then I got this special offer for cheap(er) tickets right after being told by my musical theater history students that I was a dope, and I took it as a sign and made the purchase. Lo and behold, the show wasn't torture. It was quite pleasant, in fact, and even surprising and revelatory in some ways, Which doesn't mean I found the screen-to-stage transfer flawless, but which also doesn't mean I feel like I wasted my money, either.
The stage version does a nice job of creating a sense of intimacy for the (rather huge) audience, which is one of its great strengths. As spectators find their seats, the cast members, all of whom play their own instruments, are up on the stage jamming away; songs range from strophic Irish ballads and rowdy reels to Eastern European folk tunes with characteristically close, dissonant harmonies and thrillingly steep vocal slides. The set is warm and inviting: the musicians, and by extension, the audience, are in a cozy Irish pub, where rich brown walls are hung with weathered, smoky mirrors, and the barstools look comfortably broken in. The fact that audience members are encouraged to wander around on the stage before the show and buy drinks on it during intermission adds to the sense of pervasive warmth that somehow makes the enormous Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre feel like a friendly, pleasantly divy corner bar where...um....everybody knows your name. The show begins quietly, gently: the audience gradually settles in and focuses on the stage as the jam session segues into the story about a Guy who has lost his woman, his music, and his sense of self, and a Girl who sets him on track again.
One of the things I most appreciated about Once when it was a tiny, quiet film was that it had a great sense of humor. Girl was flip and sarcastic; Da was a man of comically few words; the musicians Girl and Guy end up recording with make a big deal about how they really don't like to play anything but Thin Lizzy covers. The marketing for the musical version of Once worried me a lot, because it makes it seem like the show takes itself way too damned seriously. There's reliance, in ads and tv spots, on the music, of course, which in both versions is all sort of humorless (with the exception of "Broken Hearted Hoover Fixer Sucker Guy"); there's also a lot of emphasis on the connection between Guy and Girl, which is all too often expressed through Deep, Meaningful Moments Involving Girl Wandering Slowly Toward Guy as if Under a Deep, Meaningful Spell, While Guy Plays Deep, Meaningful Love Songs on his Deep, Meaningful Guitar and Looks at Her Deeply. And Meaningfully.
But the stage version has kept, and even added to, the quirky lightheartedness that was so pleasurable in the film. Self-aware jokes about the transition from screen to stage are cracked regularly; Girl is as snide and sarcastic as ever. And a whole host of new characters, or ones that have been given larger roles than they had in the film, add an offbeat wackiness to the proceedings. I was relieved by how funny the musical version is. I laughed a lot.
I was also fairly blown away by a few of the musical numbers. Individually, some of the actors are reasonably good, if not brilliant musicians: Joanna Christie, as Girl, is a fine pianist, if not a terribly expressive one; Arthur Darvill, as Guy, held his own, even though his guitar slid gradually out of tune by intermission and his fretwork could be sloppy. With the possible exception of "Falling Slowly," which is the most well-known piece from Once for a reason, I have never been terribly taken by the songs Guy performs through the show. This makes it all the harder for me to suspend reality when the other characters make a big deal out of how talented he is. Yet maybe because of my lowered expectations, the ensemble numbers consistently stunned me. The emphasis on the secondary characters allowed for a particularly moving sequence in act II that emphasized, through song and movement, the soaring ups and crushing downs recent immigrants experience as they find their footing in new lands. And there is no way to properly describe the rich, gorgeous sound the entire cast makes when they play together, except to say that it is as warm and inviting as the set looks. If there is anything that captures the essence of live performance as well as the act I closer "Gold" does, I haven't heard it--and I've seen that number performed in commercials, on television, on the Internet. Nothing does the live rendition justice. It alone is worth the price of admission.
But this is precisely why it seems so weird that what gets lost in translation in Once's passage from screen to stage is the depiction, more broadly, of the electricity that people feel when they are making music together. The film captured this particularly well: not only did the growing attraction between Guy and Girl make perfect sense in the context of an intense, whirlwind recording session, but so too did the bonds that were quickly formed between the backing musicians they find to work with (the dudes who loved Lynott). The musical version of Once tries to build the same intensity, but fails, I think for a number of reasons: the new emphasis on secondary characters draws away from the trajectory; stage shows cannot rely on things like closeups and cuts and montages; there is more of an effort in the musical to extend the warmth and electricity the characters feel for each other outward to the audience. It's a tradeoff, I know, but as a result, I found the relationship between Guy and Girl much less intimate, meaningful, and believable than it was in the movie.
Then again, I quite enjoyed their company nonetheless. Once was a good reentry into the world of stage musicals that were once films: it is a quiet, sweet little film that has been lovingly, carefully crafted into a quiet, sweet, somewhat different little musical. Curmudgeon though I am as a spectator, it's only fair to acknowledge that in the end, there's no real harm in that.
Wednesday, June 26, 2013
Geppetto
Even before Geppetto (Carlo Adinolfi) walks into his workshop, the simple set reflects a yearning of years gone past. Its brick walls display lobby cards advertising Geppetto and Donna’s Mythic Puppet Company and its famous performances in classics such as Orpheus and Eurydice and Helen and Menelaus. Only now the puppets hang forlornly on the wall or limply on the table, waiting for their puppetmaster.
Just the presence of Geppetto animates them as he wishes his puppets Buono Sera. Concrete Temple Theatre’s play may focus on the harsh reality of re-building a life after a loved one passes, but it also shows that value in the affection of objects.
Geppetto, a poor Italian immigrant, is rehearsing for a festival—the first one he’ll do after the death of his wife and co-puppeteer. All the old standbys, however, won’t work with just a single participant pulling the strings and manning the sock puppets. Even his hero becomes a double amputee puppet after an accident.
What gives the play its poignancy, though, is Geppetto’s relationship with his wooden and cloth friends. Throughout his railings at God and the anguish of his loss, the puppeteer maintains a sometimes hilarious conversation with his inanimate companions, at one point addressing one puppet, tied in chains for her role in Perseus and Andrometer, with “Jenny, how you suffer for your art.”
Geppetto suffers, too. At one point, he struggles to control seagulls with his head, balmy waves with an apparatus tied to his waist, a sea monster with a flickering tongue with one hand, and Perseus with the other. The show, created by Adinolfi and its director/writer Renee Philippi, (both co-artistic directors of Concrete Temple Theatre), used Pinocchio, Ernest Hemingway’s The Old Man and the Sea, and Hugh Herr, a double amputee rock climber, as its inspirations.
Ultimately, the slight story offers no rocks-your-socks-off moments, yet its quiet pull lingers, reminding us of the resiliency of humans. Best of all is the meet-the-puppets segment after the show, where Adinolfi gives a mini-master class on puppetry and the audience gets to become puppeteers for a moment.
Shows are Thursday-Sunday (ending June 30th) at HERE in Soho.
(Press ticket, general seating)
Monday, June 24, 2013
Rantoul and Die
Playwright Mark Roberts is not a member of the Amoralists, but his play Rantoul and Die, well-directed by Jay Stull, is Amoralist material right down to its DNA. The characters are working class and money is always an issue; they speak with a lyrical vulgarity that is poetic yet somehow realistic; they are deeply, noisily emotional; and they yell, curse, and hit one another, yet are strangely sympathetic. The plot is straightforward; the pacing is quick, even frenetic, and the mood is almost operatic in its intensity. Overall, the play is creepy, human, and extremely funny. Like I said, Amoralist theatre.
Debbie married Rallis because "the rent will get paid and he probably won't hit me." And while she remains grateful that he did indeed treat her well, she is now tired of his depression, wimpiness, and total lack of bedroom skills. (Debbie tells Rallis, "We have lousy sex, Rallis. Those rare times we do have it. It is the
ugliest, clumsiest, unsexiest thing I have ever seen. And I used to work
in a nursing home.")
Rallis still adores Debbie so he slits his wrists in despair and/or as a cry for help. Gary, his good friend, responds by pushing Rallis to get off of the couch, leave Debbie behind, and restart his life. However, Gary's idea of helping is to strangle Rallis almost to death to prove that he doesn't actually want to kill himself. And his verbal comfort isn't much better: "Your heart is broke? Boo-fucking-hoo! Everybody's heart is broke. Why don't we all put up a billboard when we get our hearts broke. Wouldn't be able to find a fucking Wendy's."
Rantoul and Die combines one-liners, well-told stories, hysterical (in both forms of the word) nastiness, and monologues about love and sex and destruction that could fairly be called arias. Running through all of this is character-based humor, lives desperately led, and sheer exuberant theatricality.
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| Sarah Lemp Photo: Russ Rowland |
Rallis still adores Debbie so he slits his wrists in despair and/or as a cry for help. Gary, his good friend, responds by pushing Rallis to get off of the couch, leave Debbie behind, and restart his life. However, Gary's idea of helping is to strangle Rallis almost to death to prove that he doesn't actually want to kill himself. And his verbal comfort isn't much better: "Your heart is broke? Boo-fucking-hoo! Everybody's heart is broke. Why don't we all put up a billboard when we get our hearts broke. Wouldn't be able to find a fucking Wendy's."
Rantoul and Die combines one-liners, well-told stories, hysterical (in both forms of the word) nastiness, and monologues about love and sex and destruction that could fairly be called arias. Running through all of this is character-based humor, lives desperately led, and sheer exuberant theatricality.
Here Lies Love
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| Photo: Sara Krulwich |
Immersive theater is hot in New York
right now, but that doesn't mean you should always believe the hype. I've seen
a bunch of shows that employ immersive techniques over the past two seasons,
and some of them really worked for me, while others just...didn't. Murder
Ballad was good fun and well directed, and it was sort of thrilling to be so
close to the actors that you could tell which ones were wearing contact lenses.
Matilda and Pippin were hardly immersive, but both of them worked the
relationship between the audience and performer in interesting and creative
ways that are atypical for Broadway shows. Last fall, Ivo Van Hove's Roman
Tragedies plunged the audience into--and around, and sometimes even directly in
the way of--the action, and also actively relied on it to drive home a series
of increasingly complex messages about global politics and the media. I haven't
seen Natasha, Pierre, and the Great
Comet of 1812, but I understand you can drink vodka and nibble caviar while
watching the performers, who occasionally come and sit at your table with you
or steal something off your plate. Then there's Here Lies Love, the critically
lauded, immersive collaboration between David Byrne, Fatboy Slim, and Alex
Timbers, which is currently at the Public. Oh, reader, I so wanted to like it.
Can you blame me? David Byrne is awesome. Fatboy Slim is
awesome. I had something akin to a religious experience when I saw Bloody
Bloody Andrew Jackson, and thus think that Alex Timbers is awesome. And in
truth, the concept of Here Lies Love is awesome, the cast was awesome, and the
choreography was awesome. The sum of all these parts, however, was not, alas,
an overload of awesomeness. For all the adoration of the press, all the ravings
about the immersive environment, all the demand for tickets, all the hip
innovations, Here Lies Love is a rather conventional show--even a maddeningly
apathetic one--that doesn't say much or use its audience in particularly
interesting ways.
Here Lies Love has been compared a lot with Evita, for obvious reasons: Both are "poperas" about the wives of famous 20th century dictators. Both women lived in former Spanish colonies and found glamour and prestige on the arms of their powerful husbands. That's a lot of similarity right there. But there's more: both women have been musicalized by creative teams built almost entirely of men, who seem, in both cases, to want spectators to view their depictions with a mix of pity, adulation, and scorn. Which is all well and good, but all I'm seeing in the press is that while the two shows beg comparison, Here Lies Love holds its own (how? I'm not sure), isn't as openly derisive of its central character (which is supposed to be a good thing, I think), and is radically different because it is immersive and Evita is not.
Here Lies Love has been compared a lot with Evita, for obvious reasons: Both are "poperas" about the wives of famous 20th century dictators. Both women lived in former Spanish colonies and found glamour and prestige on the arms of their powerful husbands. That's a lot of similarity right there. But there's more: both women have been musicalized by creative teams built almost entirely of men, who seem, in both cases, to want spectators to view their depictions with a mix of pity, adulation, and scorn. Which is all well and good, but all I'm seeing in the press is that while the two shows beg comparison, Here Lies Love holds its own (how? I'm not sure), isn't as openly derisive of its central character (which is supposed to be a good thing, I think), and is radically different because it is immersive and Evita is not.
I'm not here to bash Evita, which I certainly have problems with--just not the same ones that I have with Here Lies Love. Sure, fine, no one would argue that Lloyd Webber and Rice depicted Evita Peron accurately, or even in a way that might possibly, on any planet, be considered nuanced. As far as I know, for example, the real Eva Peron was never followed around by a heroic, utterly uncomplicated, deeply soulful (and typically quite hunky) version of Che Guevara. Also, while she might not have been a very nice person, maybe--and I might be going out on a limb, here--she was not quite the conniving, wheedling, money-hungry, social-climbing whore that Rice and Lloyd Webber feverishly envisioned her to be. Then again, their Evita is big. She is meaty, and alluring, and almost cartoonishly emotive--so much so that when she dies at the end of Evita, the show collapses in on itself and dies, too. The Evita of Evita is larger than life. She is the reason for Patti LuPone, for goodness' sakes.
Imelda is played by Ruthie Ann Miles, who is not comparable
in style to Patti LuPone, but who is clearly enormously talented in her own
right. She does a fine job portraying Marcos from youth on up, in a storyline
that's treated awfully conventionally for all the gimmickry: As a child, Imelda
wishes her family had more money and status than they do (she is depicted as
poor in the musical; she was not in real life). She is very pretty. She wins
beauty pageants. She dates Benigno Aquino, and then marries Ferdinand Marcos
after a whirlwind courtship. She takes pills. She parties a lot and spends a
lot of money. She is sad when her husband has an affair. She is also sad when
her country rejects her and Ferdinand after they've kept themselves in power
for over twenty years, stolen countless billions, and committed all kinds of
corruptions and human rights violations. The US
helps the Marcos family evacuate and settle safely in Hawaii
when their government falls, peacefully, to Corazon Aquino, wife of the
assassinated Benigno.
The title of the show is apparently what Imelda Marcos wants
on her gravestone when she dies: "Here Lies Love." Really? On a
gravestone? That's pretty arrogant, huh? And also pretty trite, no? Yes. Exactly.
And herein lies the problem: The Imelda Marcos that is central to Here Lies
Love is never much more interesting than this gravestone platitude is.
There's no real character, here--just a sort of two-dimensional list of events
that Byrne, Timbers and--um---Slim don't seem entirely comfortable with or even
clear on. Is this woman a self-aggrandizing asshole? A victim of circumstances?
A materialistic narcissist? Or is she just astoundingly shallow and not very
bright or interesting? I wish they had made up their minds and run with
whatever Imelda they wanted to develop. But as it was, I never felt any spark
of--well, of anything for this flimsy stage version of the fallen first lady:
No pity, no hatred, no attraction, no repulsion. There is scant mention of
shoes in Here Lies Love. Everyone who has written about the musical thus far
feels compelled to mention this fact. I am starting to wonder if it's because
no one is quite certain what else there is to say about Imelda Marcos'
depiction without them.
And yes, I get it, the show was about her, not about him.
But the fact that Ferdinand is--like all the other characters, really--even
more frustratingly, thinly developed than Imelda is makes Here Lies Love seem
more sexist than I would have expected and that I am sure its (almost entirely
male) creative team would have liked. I don't fling the term around lightly.
But the fact that a famous, affluent woman who likes to party and wear nice
shoes is held up for scrutiny and easy passing judgment when it is, after all,
her husband who was the person in power--greedy, grossly mishandled,
dangerously corrupt power--irked me. So too did the decision to make
Imelda poor in Here Lies Love, which somehow strikes me as a cheap ploy for
some kind of sympathy she didn't deserve, and a plot device that doesn't
jibe with her later assertions that it's poor peoples' fault that they are
poor.
The ending, too, fell flat for me, especially since it traded on some old rock and roll cliches that I've come to loathe at this point in my life. The People Power Revolution was depicted in song, the lyrics of which were drawn from transcripts of interviews with people involved in the event. Nice touch. But the piece was initially performed by a single guy on acoustic guitar, which I suppose was meant to resonate after an hour and a half of electronic, bootie-shaking disco, but which just reeked to me of folkie old-guard Bob Dylan worship, whether it was meant to or not. The single guitar-playing guy was slowly joined by another guy on snare and then, in the last stanza, a woman on bass drum. It was nice of them to put a woman up there for some of the protest, I guess; I suspect there were plenty of women who were involved during the original uprising, too.
The ending, too, fell flat for me, especially since it traded on some old rock and roll cliches that I've come to loathe at this point in my life. The People Power Revolution was depicted in song, the lyrics of which were drawn from transcripts of interviews with people involved in the event. Nice touch. But the piece was initially performed by a single guy on acoustic guitar, which I suppose was meant to resonate after an hour and a half of electronic, bootie-shaking disco, but which just reeked to me of folkie old-guard Bob Dylan worship, whether it was meant to or not. The single guitar-playing guy was slowly joined by another guy on snare and then, in the last stanza, a woman on bass drum. It was nice of them to put a woman up there for some of the protest, I guess; I suspect there were plenty of women who were involved during the original uprising, too.
But the end was doubly irksome in how it used the audience
in its reenactment of the PPR: it didn't. Not at all. And here's the thing:
Here Lies Love has been touted as immersive. I think I've used the term about
three-hundred times here, and it's one of the most applied adjectives I've seen
when it comes to writing about this show. It's what has helped sell it--its
immersiveness.
Which is all well and good, except that the show ultimately doesn't actually do anything interesting with the audience. Spectators are, in fact, kept on a very short leash. Dancing ushers in bright orange jumpsuits keep people moving one way or the other so that the large platforms can be moved all over the floor. There are a few moments during which the audience is directed to do a line dance or form a conga line or shout "yeah" when the DJ asks them to. But otherwise, spectators are instructed to stand around watching the action, or move a little to the left, or a little to the right, out of the way of a passing actor, some moving scenery, or a rotating platform. Until the end, that is, when all spectators are instructed to clear the floor and sit on bleachers, thereby allowing the imagined fourth wall to lower during what might otherwise have been a truly immersive restaging of the PPR.
Which is all well and good, except that the show ultimately doesn't actually do anything interesting with the audience. Spectators are, in fact, kept on a very short leash. Dancing ushers in bright orange jumpsuits keep people moving one way or the other so that the large platforms can be moved all over the floor. There are a few moments during which the audience is directed to do a line dance or form a conga line or shout "yeah" when the DJ asks them to. But otherwise, spectators are instructed to stand around watching the action, or move a little to the left, or a little to the right, out of the way of a passing actor, some moving scenery, or a rotating platform. Until the end, that is, when all spectators are instructed to clear the floor and sit on bleachers, thereby allowing the imagined fourth wall to lower during what might otherwise have been a truly immersive restaging of the PPR.
Why the choice to drive a wedge between the audience and spectator at this
point? Why not involve the audience in the reenactment of a mass movement? Come
to think of it, why was this piece immersive at all? Why are we all in a disco?
Are we all supposed to be Imelda Marcos? Are we all Filipinos? Are we all
Americans? And if so, are we being judged for dancing and having fun while the
Marcos's abuse their power and then get escorted out of their country by our
military and taken safely to ours? We are in some way complicit, right? And if
so, couldn't that be made more clear, somehow? Or is the audience genuinely
meant to feel absolutely nothing at all, except that it was cool to boogie down
with Imelda Marcos? And if so, what is the point of any of this?
I don't think all theater has to say something deep and meaningful, but a show about the Marcos regime--at the Public, no less--that seems so hesitant to say anything at all confuses me. So too do all the accolades. Believe me when I say that it feels unpleasant to be the sourpuss off in the corner, wondering what the fuss is all about, and ruining the party for everyone else.
I don't think all theater has to say something deep and meaningful, but a show about the Marcos regime--at the Public, no less--that seems so hesitant to say anything at all confuses me. So too do all the accolades. Believe me when I say that it feels unpleasant to be the sourpuss off in the corner, wondering what the fuss is all about, and ruining the party for everyone else.
Wednesday, June 19, 2013
A Picture of Autumn
You have through July 14th to catch N.C. Hunter's A Picture of Autumn at the Mint, and you really should. This 1951 drama/comedy features a huge house and characters that would fit right in on Downton Abbey, yet its themes, relationships, and conflicts remain completely contemporary.
In brief: Sir Charles and Lady Margaret Denham and Charles' brother Harry are getting on in years and find themselves less and less able to deal with their home, Union Manor, which has fallen into serious disrepair. Once upon a time, there were dozens of servants; now there is only the ancient "Nurse," who needs at least as much care as she offers. Most of the day-to-day chores fall to Lady Margaret, who feels more tired every day--and no wonder, when even getting from the kitchen to the sitting room is such a long walk. Still, Margaret, Charles, and Harry are happy at Union Manor and content with the prospect of someday dying there. Enter older son Robert, who believes--with much reason--that the three senior citizens should sell the manor and move to a more manageable home, perhaps a hotel for the elderly. After all, hasn't he received frequent letters from Margaret complaining of how difficult her life has become?
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| Helen Cespedes, George Morfogen Photo: Richard Termine |
Tuesday, June 18, 2013
Turnabout Is Fair Play: On Reviewing and Being Reviewed
Here's the basic formula of reviewing: a bunch of people, frequently talented, sometimes brilliant, strive for weeks, months, or years, often at great sacrifice, and then I show up and judge them. It doesn't seem fair.
And yet I don't plan to stop. I believe that reviewers can make a contribution. Minimally, we offer publicity; maximally, we add something valuable to the conversation. At least we try (many of us, anyway).
The thing is, I know what it feels like to get bad reviews. I know how easy it is to remember the negatives and forget the positives. So, in the interest of full disclosure, I think it's time to share some of the bad reviews my book, The Lesbian Sex Book (later updated as The New Lesbian Sex Book) received.
The book also received some good reviews and sold pretty well. Yet it's the bad reviews I remember, nearly 20 years later. (And, sigh, I don't think the bad reviews are particularly unfair.)
I would love to hear what other people have to say about the role of reviewers. Comments welcome!
And yet I don't plan to stop. I believe that reviewers can make a contribution. Minimally, we offer publicity; maximally, we add something valuable to the conversation. At least we try (many of us, anyway).The thing is, I know what it feels like to get bad reviews. I know how easy it is to remember the negatives and forget the positives. So, in the interest of full disclosure, I think it's time to share some of the bad reviews my book, The Lesbian Sex Book (later updated as The New Lesbian Sex Book) received.
"Necessary but dull."
"The humor is somewhat simplistic, even embarrassing at times."
"Disappointing."
"If you have ever had lesbian sex, there will be little for you to learn from Wendy Caster's book."
"Unintentionally funny in places [with] a distinct lack of irony."
"Full of . . . useless quirky hints to spice up your love life. It's American--need I say more." (From Dublin.)(I love that last one--not only can't I write, but I disgraced my entire country.)
The book also received some good reviews and sold pretty well. Yet it's the bad reviews I remember, nearly 20 years later. (And, sigh, I don't think the bad reviews are particularly unfair.)
I would love to hear what other people have to say about the role of reviewers. Comments welcome!
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