Tennessee Williams’s play Orpheus Descending (recently at the Theatre for a New Audience) was the first of his works to be produced. While it is not one of his masterpieces, it is still rich, sad, funny, fascinating, and compellingly overwrought.
As described on TFANA’s website, the play “tells the story of the passion of two outcasts—Lady Torrance, a storekeeper’s wife and daughter of a murdered Sicilian bootlegger, and Val, a wandering guitar player—and their attempt to escape from a Southern Hell.”
Lady (the excellent Maggie Siff) and Val (Pico Alexander) must negotiate dealings with a wide variety of townspeople: Maggie’s husband, deathly ill but still quite powerful and mean; Carol Cutere, a needy young woman with little chance of ever getting her needs met; Vee Talbott (the wonderful Ana Reeder), who turns her religious visions into paintings; and her husband, the sheriff, who operates in a much more concrete–and dangerous–manner. There are also the town gossips, Maggie’s husband’s nurse, and others.
Lady and Val exist in a different world than the rest of the town, and they inevitably get involved, despite the dangers of doing so. They talk and actually listen to each other, they understand each other, and they are deeply drawn to each other physically. Most importantly, they find hope in each other.
Erica Schmidt’s direction of the TFANA production left much to be desired in terms of clarify and use of space. The cast was uneven. Maggie Siff had the presence and skill necessary to ground the play in the underpinning of reality that it needs. Pico Alexander lacked the animal magnetism required by his role, which threw off the balance of the play. But all in all, the TFANA production was vibrant and alive.
Once Upon a One More Time is not a show I would usually see. The only thing I know about Britney Spears is that she's in the news a lot and has had some tough times. And I don't care much about fairy tales. And I relate to princesses not at all.
But my old friend Linda's son is in the show. Many years ago, Linda and I used to sneak into shows together; we'd travel an hour and a half each way to see a 50-minute second act! We saw entire shows when we had the money, but that was not often. We were kids.
The thing is, Broadway was complete magic to us. The people on stage were otherworldly--certainly not regular humans. Broadway was a place for joy and pain and catharsis and wonder and breath-taking talent. My view of Broadway has gotten a bit less shiny over the years, but there is still part of me that is gob-smacked by Broadway talent. So if Linda's son is in a show, I'm going!
He's Joshua Daniel Johnson, and he's a particularly fabulous part of a particularly fabulous ensemble. He and they are wonderful, energetic, radiant. And they work their butts off! I'm in awe.
The show itself is fun, full of wild choreography and great singing. Spears' songs are great to listen to, and the entire cast is top-notch.
It's too bad that the book, while full of funny lines and good ideas, doesn't engage the audience emotionally (or at least this audience). It's hard to care about Cinderella, Prince Charming, and Snow White (despite the hard work and excellence of the performers) when they are written as stick figures.
Once Upon a One More Time is an excellent concert, however, and I had a great time.
Well, it is that time of year again. The 76th Tony Awards will recognize theatrical achievements on Broadway for the 2022-23 season. Who will win? Below are Show Showdown's guesses.
Clip from New York, New York
Best Book of a
Musical
Liz:Kimberly Akimbo
Wendy: Wow, one I’d
finally bet on: Kimberly Akimbo,
David Lindsay-Abaire.
Sandra: Ditto (I
submitted my predictions last … so you might see this a few times).
Best Original Score (Music and/or
Lyrics) Written for the Theatre Liz:Kimberly Akimbo
Wendy: Kimberly Akimbo, Music: Jeanine Tesori,
Lyrics: David Lindsay-Abaire
Sandra: Ditto
Best Performance by an Actor in a
Leading Role in a Play Liz: Wendell Pierce, Arthur
Miller's Death of a Salesman. Pierce was revelatory as Willy Loman and richly deserving of the award. I
thought Stephen McKinley Henderson was also brilliant in Between Riverside and
Crazy, and I’d be delighted if he took this, but I suspect it’ll go to Pierce.
Wendy: Tough, tough,
tough category to guess. I guess this is kinda cheating, but I predict the two
men from Topdog/Underdog. I just hope
that Sean Hayes doesn’t win; his winning would seem just too #TonysTooWhite
Sandra: The fate of Willy
Loman and his family is always wrenching, but particularly so in this version …
and Wendell Pierce’s take on the iconic role ups the ante.
Best Performance by an Actress in a
Leading Role in a Play Liz: Jodie Comer, Prima Facie. I confess I’ve seen none of these, so this is a shot in the dark, but Comer
apparently gives a mesmerizing, scenery-chewing, shape-shifting, mountain-moving,
buckets-of-sweat-spill-your-guts-out performance, which is just total Tony bait.
Wendy: This category
should have five nominees! That being said, I think Jodie Comer, Prima Facie,
has got it. Her performance is astonishing, and the role is full of the
dramatic opportunities that nab trophies. If Comer wasn’t in the list, I think
Jessica Chastain, A Doll's House,
would have been the winner. Truly, this category sums up the weirdness of
awards: four nominees instead of five for no real reason, and comparing apples,
oranges, kumquats and motorcycles.
Sandra: Let’s make this
lucky number seven for Audra McDonald.
Best Performance by an Actor in a
Leading Role in a Musical Liz: J. Harrison Ghee, Some Like It Hot. Ghee’s performance as a trans jazz musician who discovers their true self as
Daphne was by equal turns hilarious, graceful, beautiful to watch, and deeply moving.
Wendy: Everyone but
Borle would be a legit winner here (I thought he was miscast and not all that
interesting). I predict J. Harrison Ghee, Some
Like It Hot, because their performance is lovely and something new.
Sandra: J. Harrison
Ghee, Some Like It Hot. This was my favorite show of the season and part of that is because of Ghee
who brings joy to this role and glorious tapping.
Best Performance by an Actor in a
Featured Role in a Play Liz: Brandon Uranowitz, Leopoldstadt. Uranowitz was memorable in a very crowded cast of characters. That said, I’d be
pleased if any of the nominees ended up winning this category.
Wendy: I’m going with
Jordan E. Cooper, Ain't No Mo'.
Fabulous performances!
Sandra: David Zayas, Cost of Living. I just loved this show … and he was
wonderful — steadfast and moving.
Best Performance
by an Actress in a Featured Role in a Play Liz: Katy
Sullivan, Cost of Living. This is total wishful thinking, but in both the original production and the Broadway one, Sullivan was funny and raw in the role of
a paraplegic woman struggling to adjust to her new disabilities, and a life
without her ex-husband.
Wendy: Katy Sullivan, Cost of Living. Though, once again, how
can anyone possibly compare these performances?
Sandra: Katy Sullivan, Cost of Living. Who didn’t gasp during
that bathtub scene? What a compelling and brave moment.
Best Performance by an Actor in a
Featured Role in a Musical Liz: Alex Newell, Shucked. Newell stopped the show mid-act when I saw it, and apparently
continues to do so every damn time with her barn-raiser of a solo number.
Wendy: Kevin Del
Aguila, Some Like It Hot, is a total
crowd pleaser.
Sandra: Gotta go with
Wendy on this one. You have to love Osgood Fielding III … if only Elon Musk was so open-minded and jovial.
Best Performance by an Actress in a
Featured Role in a Musical Liz: Bonnie Milligan, Kimberly Akimbo
Wendy: Bonnie Milligan, Kimberly Akimbo, is a crowd
pleaser.
Sandra: I feel like Sweeney deserves some acknowledgment
this season and Ruthie Ann Miles is its best shot, bringing a seething fury and
sadness to the beggar woman.
Kimberly Akimbo
Best Scenic Design of a Play Liz: I had some other guess here, but I totally just changed it because I too think Wendy had the better guess. What she says:
Wendy: Tim Hatley & Andrzej
Goulding, Life of Pi
Sandra: I’m with Wendy.
Look what they did with a boat …
Best Scenic
Design of a Musical Liz: Beowulf
Boritt, New York, New York. New York, New York is not as genuinely terrible as most of the reviews
imply…but then, the scenic design really did stand out as a particular strength.
Wendy: Beowulf Boritt,
New York, New York
Sandra: Beowulf Boritt, New York, New York. I loved the subtle sketching of a city neighborhood that no longer exists —
with its balconies overlooking everyone’s business.
Best Costume Design of a Play Liz: Emilio Sosa, Ain't No Mo'. For Peaches’ glorious getups alone….
Wendy: Emilio Sosa, Ain't No Mo'
Sandra: Ditto
Best Costume Design of a Musical Liz: Gregg Barnes, Some Like It Hot. I would happily wear the same pair of jeans and ratty t-shirt every day of my
life if I could, and yet I coveted every damn outfit worn in this show.
Wendy: Gregg Barnes, Some Like It Hot
Sandra: Ditto
& Juliet
Best Lighting Design of a Play Liz: Bradley King, Fat Ham
Wendy: Jon Clark, A Doll's House
Sandra:Tim Lutkin, Life of Pi
Best Lighting Design of a Musical Liz: Natasha Katz. No
idea who will win, so I’m guessing Katz because she’s nominated twice. For
which show? Dunno.
Wendy: Ken Billington, New York, New York
Sandra: Natasha Katz, Some Like It Hot
Best Sound Design of a Play Liz: Ben & Max Ringham. See "lighting design" above.
Wendy: Ben & Max
Ringham, A Doll's House. Rarely has sound design had such a significant role in the ambience, meaning,
and success of a play.
Sandra: Carolyn Downing, Life of Pi
Best Sound Design of a Musical Liz: Gareth Owen, & Juliet
Wendy: Scott Lehrer & Alex
Neumann, Into the Woods
Sandra: I’m with Wendy
with this one.
Shucked Broadway Recording of "Corn."
Best Direction of a Play Liz: Saheem Ali, Fat Ham
Wendy: Aargh! How to
choose? I’m going with Stevie Walker-Webb, Ain't
No Mo', for his breathtakingly energetic, theatrical directing.
Sandra: Patrick Marber, Leopoldstadt
Best Direction of a Musical Liz: Lear deBessonet, Into the
Woods. I was never a huge fan of this particular show, but deBessonet’s bubbly, joyous
production was thoroughly delightful.
Wendy: Lear deBessonet, Into the Woods.
Sandra: Casey Nicholaw, Some Like It
Hot. That chase scene alone deserves a
Tony.
Best Choreography Liz: Casey
Nicholaw, Some Like It Hot. Call me a sucker for an old-fashioned tap-heavy musical, but come on, now.
Wendy: Another tough
category. Casey Nicholaw, Some Like It Hot.
Sandra: Casey Nicholaw, Some Like It
Hot. I haven’t seen such exciting tap since 42nd
Street--and did I mention that chase scene?
Best
Orchestrations Liz: No clue, truly.
May the best orchestrator win.
Wendy: Jason Howland, Shucked. Total guess!
Sandra: Bill Sherman and Dominic
Fallacaro, & Juliet. Because I just want them to win
something.
Best Play Liz: Leopoldstadt. Stoppard’s legacy and the fact that this show keeps getting described
as “probably his very last” will result, I think, in a symbolic win. That’ll be
fine with me, but then, so would it be if any other show nominated wins for
best play instead.
Wendy: I adore Stoppard, and I think he's going to win, but I'd love it to be Fat Ham.
Sandra: What Liz said.
Best Musical Liz: Some Like It Hot. Big, splashy, sweetly subversive, lotsa tap dance.
Wendy: I predict Kimberly Akimbo.
Sandra:Some Like It Hot. Really fun, exuberant, well-staged musical.
Best Revival of a Play Liz:The Sign in Sidney Brustein's Window. I really loved this production and this play, even as I suspect I’m wrong and
it won’t win.
Wendy: Topdog/Underdog, but I wouldn't bet a lot of money on it.
Sandra: The Piano Lesson
Best Revival of a Musical Liz:Parade. I’m really not a big fan of this show, even as I recognize that the
production is solid. I would be delighted if Into the Woods upset the cart, but that’s no longer running and Parade is.
Wendy: Into the Woods. I have more faith in people's memories, but, hey, I could be wrong.
Sandra: Parade. A moving production that
offers context about the true story
I reviewed Blanche: The Life and Times of Tennessee Williams's Greatest Creation at Talkin' Broadway:
Blanche: The Life and Times of Tennessee Williams's Greatest Creation, by Nancy Schoenberger, is an odd little book. Saying that it runs some 193 pages of actual content is generous, as that includes a number of white pages, a faux obituary of Blanche DuBois, and four pages of sonnets, created by Schoenberger, that purport to be what Blanche's long-dead young husband might have written (!!!). Trimmed of its repetitions, the book could have made a fairly interesting long essay in The New Yorker or The New York Review of Books.
The Gallery Players production of Assassins is unfortunately not up to its usual standards. I admire the ambition of attempting Assassins, with its non-plot, odd politics, long swaths of spoken scenes, and challenging score. But: Some of the performers didn't sing well enough or act well enough. A few were completely miscast. The band lacked cohesion, and the sound design didn't help it or the performers. The sound effects didn't work: the noises of a bottle-making factory sounded more like someone snoring, and the gunshots were too low and distant to discomfort the audience as they should. Some of the costumes didn't work; in particular, John Wilkes Booth's suit seemed more appropriate for a comedian than a dashing serious actor. The lighting was occasionally murky.
Weirdly enough, however, I would not dissuade you from going. Despite its many flaws, the production was ultimately disturbing in the right way.
Entertainment awards are silly and they're also endlessly fascinating. Part of the allure is the fashion, pomp, and party atmosphere. A bigger part, for me, is the speeches--at least, those speeches that show some personality, humor, and emotion. Add exciting numbers from nominated musicals, and a good time is had by most.
However, what drives me the most crazy, personally, about the Tonys comes down to numbers. For example, with four nominees, someone could win with only 31% of the vote, with the other three nominees receiving an average of 23% each. With five nominees, the winner might only have 24% of the vote, with the other four nominees averaging 19% each. (At least the Tonys have nothing as silly as the 10 nominees for best picture, in which the winner could have as little as 20% of the vote, with the other nominees averaging 8.9% each.)
While the examples I have given are extreme, the point still stands that someone can win a "best" award without even getting a majority of the vote.
Then we get to the odd rules set by the Tonys. For example, if a category has nine or more potential nominees, there will be five nominations (barring any ties). But if it has fewer, there will be four nominations. What has that got to do with the quality of the productions or performances? In cases where there are four nominees, is there a lessening in quality for the potential fifth because he/she/it/they had fewer competitors? If another show opened at the last minute, bringing the total to nine in various categories, would that fifth potential nominee suddenly improve?
In the other direction, are there always four or five performances/productions that definitely deserve to be nominated? There have been many times where the fourth nominee definitely came across as filler. And that's not even mentioning painful years such as 1995 when Sunset Boulevard won a slew of awards with only one competitor or none! Does that make Sunset Boulevard'sTonys worth less? I guess it depends on how you feel about Sunset Boulevard. (IMHO, worse shows have won, but not many.)
The final numberical issue is the total number of nominations for a particular show. Yes, Some Like It Hot is an amiable and enjoyable musical, but ads screaming "13 nominations!" suggest the show is brilliant. Four of the noms are design nominations, and, yes, it is a beautifully designed show. But that doesn't make it a great show. Another four are performance nominations. And, yes, it is a beautifully performed show. But that doesn't make it a great show either. It's a nice show. I would have certainly voted for it had it been against Sunset Boulevard! But great, no.
So, the numbers work against the significance of the Tony Award.