Thursday, January 19, 2012

Richard III at BAM with Kevin Spacey

I also want to go see GATZ, which Tara posted about earlier today, but I also like the look of this Bridge Project production of Shakespeare's Richard III, with Kevin Spacey in the title role, at BAM.  It runs through March 4, and seats still seem available on the website.  I'm holding a ticket for Tues Jan 31 in the upper gallery, which is a perfectly fine (and cheap!) place to sit in the Harvey Theater.

Today's Times loved Spacey's star turn --

In a happy convergence of an actor and a role Mr. Spacey makes acting up a devastating storm both the form and content of his part in “Richard III,” which has been staged (none too subtly) by the Oscar-winning director Sam Mendes . It’s the season to be cynical about all things political. (Not for nothing is the drop curtain at the Harvey Theater emblazoned with the word “NOW.”) And Mr. Spacey and Mr. Mendes add their voices to the din of derision by presenting a Richard who drips with tasty, venomous contempt for the process of becoming head of state.

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Sleep No More

I just saw a great, bizarre, experimental play that has something to do with Macbeth in a converted warehouse in Chelsea.  It's been extended again & is now playing through March 24, but rapidly selling out.  My thoughts via the Bookfish here.

Sleep No More

(cross-posted from The Bookfish)


Alone, masked, and silent: that’s the way to see a play.  For a couple hours last night, while wandering through six stories of a Chelsea warehouse on W. 27th that had been transformed by Punchdrunk into aMacbeth/Hitchcock noir horror fantasy, I was thinking about how elusive the theatrical transaction can be.
The place was full of great stuff, a candy shop, hospital wing, detective’s office/taxidery shop in which a fatal (stuffed) raven was disembowled to reveal a tickertape with one of the few Shakespearean lines I heard all night:
It will have blood, they say.  Blood will have blood.
There were three distinct sets of people inside: audience members like me, wearing white masks; theater staff wearing black masks and blocking access to certain rooms and stairwells; and maybe 8 or 9 actors, without masks, doing various things.
Audiences want stories, so when we saw actors doing things — dancing, packing suitcases, trying to wash their bloody hands and faces in one of many bath-tubs, or smothering King Duncan with a pile of pillows — we gathered to watch.  The scenes were brief, often powerful, and always fast: when the actors hurried on to the next room, they trailed clouds of awkwardly jostling masked audience members in their wakes.
The set was really the star, because you could play with it.  I picked up pieces of paper, sometimes founds line from Macbeth on them, examined bird skeletons, ate hard candy, played a card game with one of the actors, though he did not choose me to give a shot of (apple juice?) whiskey at the end of the game.  The soundtrack, from old Hitchcock thrillers, was gorgeous.
Some rooms were full of matter, overflowing with detail and debris.  Oothers were airy and empty.  One was a maze of leafless trees, another a spare half-grid of collapsing brick walls, thigh-high, with fake Baroque sculpture.
We wanted to see things happen, all of us in the white masks, & we hustled and wandered and sometimes broke into a jog as we tried to catch up to whatever was going on.  We saw highlight scenes from the play  – mine were the banquet, which I saw twice, the murder, the uncovering of the raven’s prophecy.  We also saw lots of not-very-Shakespearean stuff: men fighting, couples dancing, a strobe-lit orgy featuring nudity and lots of stage blood, card games, and letters being written.
Diffuse and sometimes disorienting, the performance didn’t feel like a performance.  The cast spoke little and seemed more dancers than anything — balletic, physical, intense.  When I think back to this performance I feel certain I’ll remember the McKittrick Hotel more than any of the humans inside it. 

The London Merchant in NYC

Saw a great review today of The London Merchant, a 1731 play by George Lillo that was all the rage in 18th-century London.  Staged by the Storm Company and Blackfriars Rep, it'll be at the Church of Notre Dame, 114th and Morningside Heights, through Jan. 28.

The Times loves it --

There are so many surprises in the 2 hours and 10 minutes of “The London Merchant” that you may have to remind yourself that yes, you are in a basement that houses the Theater of the Church of Notre Dame, a space far off the radar of most audiences. That’s not a snobbish statement, but rather an acknowledgment that, in New York, out-of-the-way places can produce some first-rate theater.

Monday, October 31, 2011

Passing Strange in the IWS

If you could not make it to last Friday's event, please remember to look at the nine images-text combinations that are hanging in the IWS for at least a few more weeks.  You might also enjoy reading my blog recap of the event. 

I'll post some photos of the afternoon as soon as I get them.