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Theatre , Video , Damn Yankees , Jean Genet , Off-Broadway Theater , Damn Yankees
Review , Damn Yankees Revival , Painting Churches Revival , Painting-Churches-Revival ,
The Maid Revival , The Maids Revival , Theater Revivals , Entertainment NewsReact
Inspiring Funny Hot Scary Outrageous Amazing Weird CrazyTheater: Damn Yankees , Damn
Maids , Damn Revivals!
DAMN YANKEES ** out of ****
THE MAIDS ** out of ****
PAINTING CHURCHES * 1/2 out of ****
Revivals are funny things. Looming over their
production is the fact that they've been done before. Is it
a revival to reclaim a flop, like Carrie ? Is it a revival of
an acclaimed play that's fallen out of sight, like Painting
Churches ? Is it a revival of a challenging and bold
classic like The Maids ? You can't help immediately
measuring the new show against the original...even if you haven't seen the original. (Surely, the originalprobably did... this... or that.) Here are several revivals, none of them successful -- is it because they fallshort of the earlier productions or because the original was over-praised? You can't always tell.
DAMN YANKEES ** out of ****
PAPERMILL PLAYHOUSEWell, the reputation of Damn Yankees is safe as a breezy example of the entertaining shows Broadway
turned out by the truckload back in the 1940s and 1950s. An ardent baseball fan sells his soul to the devil
in exchange for a chance to become one of the greatest players of all time and -- more importantly --
finally beat those damn Yankees. You might almost think the team of Adler and Ross sold their souls for
success as well. Two guys in their 20s, they burst onto Broadway with a hit revue followed by ThePajama Game and then Damn Yankees , all three of them critical and commercial hits. These guys had
songs on the radio, hits on the Great White Way and the world at their feet until Jerry Ross droppeddead of lung disease at the age of 29.
The sky was the limit for this duo but having seen the Broadway revival and now this production, I feel
Damn Yankees at its best is a solid but not great show. Still I love baseball (and those damn Yankees
specifically) not to mention musicals, so singing and dancing ballplayers are always welcome.MOST POPULAR ON HUFFPOST 1 of 2
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But with some good songs and a silly plot, Damn Yankees needs star power to put it over. (That's why the
Broadway revival of The Pajama Game worked so well -- Harry Connick Jr. and Kelli O'Hara tore it up
and had star power to spare.
Unfortunately, on the day I saw the show the actor playing Joe Hardy was out and Steve Czarnecki took
his place. Sports is filled with stories of players coming off the bench and scoring the winning run butsadly that wasn't the case here. Czarnecki has a booming, old-fashioned voice more suited for Les Mizthan this light fare. Plus, he simply doesn't have the physical presence of an athlete in his prime whichkeeps the sexual tension that should be abundant distinctly low-key. Similarly, Chryssie Whitehead hashuge shoes to fill playing the vamp Lola, a role previously tackled by Gwen Verdon and Bebe Neuwirth,among others. She too falls notably short both as a singer and dancer, so the big knock-em dead song"Whatever Lola Wants" and their duet "Two Lost Souls" fall flat.
On the plus side, it's a typically handsome production (the office and stadium scenes with the lights of
the playing field in the background are especially effective), the orchestra is up to its usual standards (led
by Music Director Ben Whiteley handling new orchestration and arrangements by Bruce Monroe) and a
string of performances in smaller parts score at least doubles.
Howard McGillin takes none of it seriously as Applegate, though he especially would have benefitted
from stronger cast mates in the two key roles of Joe Hardy and Lola. Nancy Anderson is strong as Gloria,the nosy reporter who wonders exactly where this phenom came from. Mike Cannon is memorable asSmokey, one of the locker room leaders on the team. (Indeed, the show's high points are the ballplayerson "Heart," "Shoeless Joe From Hannibal, Mo" and "The Game." And Patti Cohenour is spot-on as Joe'slong-suffering wife Meg, a baseball widow for six months out of the year. Her genuine emotion andcasual authority on stage let you know that this Damn Yankees can and should be a damn sight better.
THE MAIDS ** out of ****
RED BULL THEATER AT THEATER AT ST. CLEMENT'S
I'd never seen The Maids before, but it's clear this Jean Genet play is a tricky one. It's filled with so much
theatricality and subtle changes in the balance of power that you can easily imagine it either works...or itdoesn't. This production -- which seems to go out of its way to telegraph the comedy and more obvioustrappings of the work -- doesn't. The work is based on a scandalous true crime story of two maids in 1933who brutally murdered their employer and her daughter. Genet's show uses this lurid tale to create athree-person balancing act in which first one maid, then the other and then the mistress in charge alltake turns being in control and humiliating and challenging the others.
It begins with what appears to be a maid serving her domineering mistress but we soon realize -- indeed,
it's underlined and exclamation pointed to an annoying level -- that this is merely play-acting by the twomaids, sisters who are ginning themselves up to commit some outrage against their mistress. They'vealready sent an anonymous letter to the police that has led to the arrest of the mistress's love. Now,before they're found out, they hope to mock her further, even to the point of death. Ana Reeder (who
could be cast as Emma Stone's sister) and Jeanine Serralles (weaker as the maid Claire) take turns
cowing before the other's wrath of lashing out in anger over the cruelty of their fate.
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In a good production, the back and forth here would be fascinating. We would watch the balance of
power shift again and again, wondering or marveling at who exactly is in control and whether it's thatvery unstable dynamic that keeps them upping the ante. Instead, it all feels very random. I must blamethe director Jesse Berger, who has clearly urged them to be as broad as possible, as if worried the
audience might be too lost for too long in determining what exactly was going on.
Suddenly, as if a switch had been turned on, J. Smith-Cameron enters as the mistress and you sit up
straight as if the play had really just begun. Smith-Cameron's Madame is no less theatrical than the
maids (they are her audience) but she's a real person, not a construct. As she undresses for the night and
natters on and on, the show is grounded in a reality it otherwise sorely lacks. Unfortunately, her part is
secondary and when she's gone the play is adrift again until it peters out to a finish.
On a technical level, however, the show is a triumph. The set by Dane Laffrey is constructed in the round
(or should I say, in the rectangle) with Madame's lavish, flower-bedecked bedroom flanked on all foursides by audience members who peep in through "windows" in the wall. Simply and effectively, thisemphasizes the undercurrents of the show. It's great fun to see the maids tussling on the bed whileaudience members on the side lean over to peep down at them. Similarly, the costumes by Sara JeanTosetti and lighting by Peter West are effective. Special kudos to the sound design by Brandon Wolcott,which is masterful in its subtlety. Wolcott effectively creates an aura of menace and unease but does sowith such quiet authority I almost wasn't certain at first it the sound design was bleeding in fromoutdoors or part of my imagination -- that's how natural and effective it was. As a servant to the play, the
tech team behind The Maids is far more trustworthy than the two murdering siblings at its heart.
PAINTING CHURCHES * 1/2 out of ****
KEEN COMPANY AT THE CLURMAN
I've wanted to see Painting Churches for years. Somehow, the title stuck in my head, even though I was
growing up in Florida and nowhere near New York when it was an Off Broadway hit and short-listed for
the Pulitzer Prize. It has a very rough similarity to On Golden Pond, the more crowd-pleasing hit turned
into a feature film. Both are about estranged children who visit their aged parents and must deal withfeelings of rejection and neglect while accepting the loving, almost closed-off relationship that the parentsdepend upon. In both, the father is ailing and slipping into senility where his ability to hold onto thepresent is slipping away.
Now that my first experience is not a success, I can't be sure whether the show hasn't stood the test of
time or simply needs a better showcase to stake its claim.
Gardner (John Cunningham) and Fanny (Kathleen Chalfant) are the Churches, a couple finally packing
up their rambling home in the city so they can spend their days at their weekend home, where the ailingGardner will be easier to keep an eye on. Their daughter Mags (Kate Turnbull), a successful painter witha major solo show in the works, arrives to pitch in and help and hopefully connect with her folks byfinally getting them to sit for a portrait. That's it and in a better show, that's plenty.
Cunningham has the best time here as the poet Gardner. He gets to quote brilliant classic poems and
draw our sympathy by forgetting who he is, where he is and what he's doing. Kathleen Chalfant is fairlysolid as his wife, though not pitch perfect the day I caught her. However, she spends much of her time
interacting with their daughter Mags, whereas Gardner is in his own little world. And Turnbull as Mags is
simply out of her depth. The scene where she hyperventilates while they study her work is especially
painful to watch for its clumsiness. With Turnbull to play off of, Chalfant simply can't do her best work.
Tech credits are modest and the show as a whole makes Painting Churches feel like a minor work by
playwright Tina Howe, rather than her most acclaimed work. I'l have to wait for a better-cast revival
before making my final judgment but it's an unfortunate effect of a poor production that it's notsomething I'm especially eager for. This doesn't feel like a missed opportunity and that surely is theunkindest cut of all.
The Theater Season 2011-2012 (on a four-star scale)
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The Agony And The Ecstasy Of Steve Jobs ** 1/2
All-American **
All's Well That Ends Well/Shakespeare in the Park **
Assistance **
The Atmosphere Of Memory 1/2 *
Blood Knot at Signature **
Bob *** 1/2
Bonnie & Clyde feature profile of Jeremy Jordan
Broadway By The Year: 1997 ** 1/2
Carrie ** 1/2
The Cherry Orchard with Dianne Wiest **
Chinglish * 1/2
Close Up Space *
Crane Story **
Cymbeline at Barrow Street Theatre ***
Damn Yankees **Dedalus Lounge * 1/2
Early Plays (Eugene O'Neill at St. Ann's Warehouse) *
Ernani at Met w Angela Meade *** 1/2
An Evening With Patti Lupone and Mandy Patinkin ***
Follies *** 1/2
Fragments ***
Galileo with F. Murray Abraham **
The Gershwins' Porgy And Bess *** 1/2
Godspell ** 1/2
Goodbar * 1/2
Hair ***
Hand To God ***
Hero: The Musical * 1/2
How The World Began * 1/2
Hugh Jackman: Back On Broadway ***
Hurt Village ***Irving Berlin's White Christmas ***
It's Always Right Now, Until It's Later *** 1/2
King Lear at Public with Sam Waterston **
Krapp's Last Tape with John Hurt ***
The Lady From Dubuque ** 1/2Lake Water **
Leo ***
Love's Labor's Lost at the PublicLab ** 1/2
Lysistrata Jones *
The Maids **Man And Boy * 1/2
The Man Who Came To Dinner **
Maple And Vine **
Master Class w Tyne Daly ** 1/2
Measure For Measure/Shakespeare in the Park ***
Milk Like Sugar ***
Mission Drift * 1/2
Misterman ** 1/2
The Mountaintop ** 1/2
Newsies **
Painting Churches * 1/2Pigpen's The Nightmare Story *** 1/2
Once *** 1/2
Olive and The Bitter Herbs ** 1/2
On A Clear Day You Can See Forever * 1/2
One Arm ***
Other Desert Cities on Broadway ** 1/2
Private Lives **
Queen Of The Mist ** 1/2
Radio City Christmas Spectacular ** 1/2
Relatively Speaking * 1/2
Richard III w Kevin Spacey at BAM ***
The Road To Mecca ** 1/2
Samuel & Alasdair: A Personal History Of The Robot War ** 1/2
The Select (The Sun Also Rises) ** 1/2
Seminar **
Septimus & Clarissa *** 1/2
Shlemiel The First ** 1/2
Silence! The Musical * 1/2
69 Degrees South * 1/2
Song From The Uproar **
Sons Of The Prophet *** 1/2
Sontag: Reborn *
Spiderman: Turn Off The Dark * 1/2
Standing On Ceremony: The Gay Marriage Plays **
Stick Fly **
The Submission **
Super Night Shot ** 1/2
Sweet and Sad **
The Table ** 1/2
Titus Andronicus at Public with Jay O. Sanders * 1/2
Tribes *** 1/2
The Ugly One **
Unnatural Acts ***
Venus In Fur ***
We Live Here **
Wild Animals You Should Know ** 1/2
Wit ** 1/2
Zarkana **
NEW YORK MUSICAL THEATRE FESTIVAL 2011
Blanche: The Bittersweet Life Of A Wild Prairie Dame *** 1/2
Central Avenue Breakdown ** 1/2
Crazy, Just Like Me ***
Cyclops: A Rock Opera *
Ennio: The Living Paper Cartoon ** 1/2
F---ing Hipsters **
Ghostlight **
Gotta Getta Girl ** 1/2 for staged reading
Greenwood *
Jack Perry Is Alive (And Dating) * 1/2
Kiki Baby ** 1/2
Kissless * 1/2
Madame X **
The Pigeon Boys ***
Time Between Us * 1/2
Tut **
FRINGEFEST NYC 2011
Araby *
The Bardy Bunch **
Books On Tape ** 1/2
Civilian **
Hard Travelin' With Woody ***
Leonard Cohen Koans *** 1/2
The More Loving One **
The Mountain Song *** 1/2
Paper Cuts ***
Parker & Dizzy's Fabulous Journey To The End Of The Rainbow ** 1/2
Pearl's Gone Blue ***
Rachel Calof ** 1/2
Romeo & Juliet: Choose Your Own Ending **
2 Burn * 1/2
Walls and Bridges **
What The Sparrow Said ** 1/2
Yeast Nation ***
Thanks for reading. Michael Giltz is the cohost of Showbiz Sandbox , a weekly pop culture podcast that
reveals the industry take on entertainment news of the day and features top journalists and opinion
makers as guests. It's available for free on iTunes. Visit Michael Giltz at his website and his daily blog.
Download his podcast of celebrity interviews and his radio show, also called Popsurfing and alsoavailable for free on iTunes. Link to him on Netflix and gain access to thousands of ratings and reviews.
Note : Michael Giltz is provided with free tickets to shows with the understanding that he will be
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04:15 PM on 03/18/2012
The stories are out of sync with todays society, they're dated. These stories need revamping and
updating, total reworks actually with their perspectives tweaked.
04:49 PM on 03/17/2012
I can see a revival of "The Man Who Came To Dinner" but it really needs a powerhouse actor to
play Sheridan Whiteside. The American Academy of Dramatic Arts did it once long ago--fail. Thenthere was even a musical of it with Dolores Gray which was terrible. I forget who played Whiteside
and obviously because his performance was highly forgettable. There's a cast recording now finally
released of it but the most entertaining song sung by the maid--the opening number--was left out.
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Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from
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Michael Giltz
Freelance writerGET UPDATES FROM MICHAEL GILTZ
Follow
Theatre , Video , Damn Yankees , Jean Genet , Off-Broadway Theater , Damn Yankees
Review , Damn Yankees Revival , Painting Churches Revival , Painting-Churches-Revival ,
The Maid Revival , The Maids Revival , Theater Revivals , Entertainment NewsReact
Inspiring Funny Hot Scary Outrageous Amazing Weird CrazyTheater: Damn Yankees , Damn
Maids , Damn Revivals!
DAMN YANKEES ** out of ****
THE MAIDS ** out of ****
PAINTING CHURCHES * 1/2 out of ****
Revivals are funny things. Looming over their
production is the fact that they've been done before. Is it
a revival to reclaim a flop, like Carrie ? Is it a revival of
an acclaimed play that's fallen out of sight, like Painting
Churches ? Is it a revival of a challenging and bold
classic like The Maids ? You can't help immediately
measuring the new show against the original...even if you haven't seen the original. (Surely, the originalprobably did... this... or that.) Here are several revivals, none of them successful -- is it because they fallshort of the earlier productions or because the original was over-praised? You can't always tell.
DAMN YANKEES ** out of ****
PAPERMILL PLAYHOUSEWell, the reputation of Damn Yankees is safe as a breezy example of the entertaining shows Broadway
turned out by the truckload back in the 1940s and 1950s. An ardent baseball fan sells his soul to the devil
in exchange for a chance to become one of the greatest players of all time and -- more importantly --
finally beat those damn Yankees. You might almost think the team of Adler and Ross sold their souls for
success as well. Two guys in their 20s, they burst onto Broadway with a hit revue followed by ThePajama Game and then Damn Yankees , all three of them critical and commercial hits. These guys had
songs on the radio, hits on the Great White Way and the world at their feet until Jerry Ross droppeddead of lung disease at the age of 29.
The sky was the limit for this duo but having seen the Broadway revival and now this production, I feel
Damn Yankees at its best is a solid but not great show. Still I love baseball (and those damn Yankees
specifically) not to mention musicals, so singing and dancing ballplayers are always welcome.MOST POPULAR ON HUFFPOST 1 of 2
MAP: Hurricane Isaac's Path
Aims For Gulf Coast
Republican Attendees Thrown
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CNN Worker
Chipotle Busted For Cheating
Customers Out Of Pennies
Limbaugh's Wild Isaac
Conspiracy
RPatz Agrees To Meet KStew
But Is Selling Their Home
Isaac Balloons Into A
Hurricane, New Orleans
Threatened FOLLOW USCelebrity TV Political Hollywood Features Hollywood Buzz Videos
Help Us Write 'The Words'
Quick Read | Comments (27) | 08.20.2012August 29, 2012
Edition: U.S.
FRONT PAGE POLITICS BUSINESS MEDIA CELEBRITY TV COMEDY FOOD STYLE ARTS BOOKS LIVE ALL SECTIONS
Bill Moyers Dean Baker
John Hillcoat Bobby BowdenHOT ON THE BLOG
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Posted: 03/16/2012 4:55 pm
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But with some good songs and a silly plot, Damn Yankees needs star power to put it over. (That's why the
Broadway revival of The Pajama Game worked so well -- Harry Connick Jr. and Kelli O'Hara tore it up
and had star power to spare.
Unfortunately, on the day I saw the show the actor playing Joe Hardy was out and Steve Czarnecki took
his place. Sports is filled with stories of players coming off the bench and scoring the winning run butsadly that wasn't the case here. Czarnecki has a booming, old-fashioned voice more suited for Les Mizthan this light fare. Plus, he simply doesn't have the physical presence of an athlete in his prime whichkeeps the sexual tension that should be abundant distinctly low-key. Similarly, Chryssie Whitehead hashuge shoes to fill playing the vamp Lola, a role previously tackled by Gwen Verdon and Bebe Neuwirth,among others. She too falls notably short both as a singer and dancer, so the big knock-em dead song"Whatever Lola Wants" and their duet "Two Lost Souls" fall flat.
On the plus side, it's a typically handsome production (the office and stadium scenes with the lights of
the playing field in the background are especially effective), the orchestra is up to its usual standards (led
by Music Director Ben Whiteley handling new orchestration and arrangements by Bruce Monroe) and a
string of performances in smaller parts score at least doubles.
Howard McGillin takes none of it seriously as Applegate, though he especially would have benefitted
from stronger cast mates in the two key roles of Joe Hardy and Lola. Nancy Anderson is strong as Gloria,the nosy reporter who wonders exactly where this phenom came from. Mike Cannon is memorable asSmokey, one of the locker room leaders on the team. (Indeed, the show's high points are the ballplayerson "Heart," "Shoeless Joe From Hannibal, Mo" and "The Game." And Patti Cohenour is spot-on as Joe'slong-suffering wife Meg, a baseball widow for six months out of the year. Her genuine emotion andcasual authority on stage let you know that this Damn Yankees can and should be a damn sight better.
THE MAIDS ** out of ****
RED BULL THEATER AT THEATER AT ST. CLEMENT'S
I'd never seen The Maids before, but it's clear this Jean Genet play is a tricky one. It's filled with so much
theatricality and subtle changes in the balance of power that you can easily imagine it either works...or itdoesn't. This production -- which seems to go out of its way to telegraph the comedy and more obvioustrappings of the work -- doesn't. The work is based on a scandalous true crime story of two maids in 1933who brutally murdered their employer and her daughter. Genet's show uses this lurid tale to create athree-person balancing act in which first one maid, then the other and then the mistress in charge alltake turns being in control and humiliating and challenging the others.
It begins with what appears to be a maid serving her domineering mistress but we soon realize -- indeed,
it's underlined and exclamation pointed to an annoying level -- that this is merely play-acting by the twomaids, sisters who are ginning themselves up to commit some outrage against their mistress. They'vealready sent an anonymous letter to the police that has led to the arrest of the mistress's love. Now,before they're found out, they hope to mock her further, even to the point of death. Ana Reeder (who
could be cast as Emma Stone's sister) and Jeanine Serralles (weaker as the maid Claire) take turns
cowing before the other's wrath of lashing out in anger over the cruelty of their fate.
Deaf Boy Asked To Make
Controversial Change (VIDEO)
PHOTO: The Queen Rolls In A
Range Rover Wearing A
Hoodie
GOP Approves Abortion Ban
DON'T MISS HUFFPOST BLOGGERS 1 of 5
Bill Moyers
WATCH: Both Parties Give
Invisible Americans the Silent
Treatment
Dean Baker
Poverty: The New Growth Industry
in America
TOP VIDEO PICKS 1 of 8
MOST DISCUSSED RIGHT NOW 1 of 2
HOT ON FACEBOOK 1 of 3Like 4k
Like 1k
Recommend 8k
Tom Hanks Solidifies Nice Guy
Reputation Through Photos,
Videos
Why Bobby Brown Walked
Out of Rehab
Holly Madison Is Pregnant
13 Movies That Changed
The Way We View Poverty
Slash Caught Fellow
Rocker Naked With His
Mom
Madonna's Message For
Americans: 'Don't Get Fat
And Lazy'
WATCH: Raging Grannies
Have Some Words For
Todd Akin
In a good production, the back and forth here would be fascinating. We would watch the balance of
power shift again and again, wondering or marveling at who exactly is in control and whether it's thatvery unstable dynamic that keeps them upping the ante. Instead, it all feels very random. I must blamethe director Jesse Berger, who has clearly urged them to be as broad as possible, as if worried the
audience might be too lost for too long in determining what exactly was going on.
Suddenly, as if a switch had been turned on, J. Smith-Cameron enters as the mistress and you sit up
straight as if the play had really just begun. Smith-Cameron's Madame is no less theatrical than the
maids (they are her audience) but she's a real person, not a construct. As she undresses for the night and
natters on and on, the show is grounded in a reality it otherwise sorely lacks. Unfortunately, her part is
secondary and when she's gone the play is adrift again until it peters out to a finish.
On a technical level, however, the show is a triumph. The set by Dane Laffrey is constructed in the round
(or should I say, in the rectangle) with Madame's lavish, flower-bedecked bedroom flanked on all foursides by audience members who peep in through "windows" in the wall. Simply and effectively, thisemphasizes the undercurrents of the show. It's great fun to see the maids tussling on the bed whileaudience members on the side lean over to peep down at them. Similarly, the costumes by Sara JeanTosetti and lighting by Peter West are effective. Special kudos to the sound design by Brandon Wolcott,which is masterful in its subtlety. Wolcott effectively creates an aura of menace and unease but does sowith such quiet authority I almost wasn't certain at first it the sound design was bleeding in fromoutdoors or part of my imagination -- that's how natural and effective it was. As a servant to the play, the
tech team behind The Maids is far more trustworthy than the two murdering siblings at its heart.
PAINTING CHURCHES * 1/2 out of ****
KEEN COMPANY AT THE CLURMAN
I've wanted to see Painting Churches for years. Somehow, the title stuck in my head, even though I was
growing up in Florida and nowhere near New York when it was an Off Broadway hit and short-listed for
the Pulitzer Prize. It has a very rough similarity to On Golden Pond, the more crowd-pleasing hit turned
into a feature film. Both are about estranged children who visit their aged parents and must deal withfeelings of rejection and neglect while accepting the loving, almost closed-off relationship that the parentsdepend upon. In both, the father is ailing and slipping into senility where his ability to hold onto thepresent is slipping away.
Now that my first experience is not a success, I can't be sure whether the show hasn't stood the test of
time or simply needs a better showcase to stake its claim.
Gardner (John Cunningham) and Fanny (Kathleen Chalfant) are the Churches, a couple finally packing
up their rambling home in the city so they can spend their days at their weekend home, where the ailingGardner will be easier to keep an eye on. Their daughter Mags (Kate Turnbull), a successful painter witha major solo show in the works, arrives to pitch in and help and hopefully connect with her folks byfinally getting them to sit for a portrait. That's it and in a better show, that's plenty.
Cunningham has the best time here as the poet Gardner. He gets to quote brilliant classic poems and
draw our sympathy by forgetting who he is, where he is and what he's doing. Kathleen Chalfant is fairlysolid as his wife, though not pitch perfect the day I caught her. However, she spends much of her time
interacting with their daughter Mags, whereas Gardner is in his own little world. And Turnbull as Mags is
simply out of her depth. The scene where she hyperventilates while they study her work is especially
painful to watch for its clumsiness. With Turnbull to play off of, Chalfant simply can't do her best work.
Tech credits are modest and the show as a whole makes Painting Churches feel like a minor work by
playwright Tina Howe, rather than her most acclaimed work. I'l have to wait for a better-cast revival
before making my final judgment but it's an unfortunate effect of a poor production that it's notsomething I'm especially eager for. This doesn't feel like a missed opportunity and that surely is theunkindest cut of all.
The Theater Season 2011-2012 (on a four-star scale)
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The Agony And The Ecstasy Of Steve Jobs ** 1/2
All-American **
All's Well That Ends Well/Shakespeare in the Park **
Assistance **
The Atmosphere Of Memory 1/2 *
Blood Knot at Signature **
Bob *** 1/2
Bonnie & Clyde feature profile of Jeremy Jordan
Broadway By The Year: 1997 ** 1/2
Carrie ** 1/2
The Cherry Orchard with Dianne Wiest **
Chinglish * 1/2
Close Up Space *
Crane Story **
Cymbeline at Barrow Street Theatre ***
Damn Yankees **Dedalus Lounge * 1/2
Early Plays (Eugene O'Neill at St. Ann's Warehouse) *
Ernani at Met w Angela Meade *** 1/2
An Evening With Patti Lupone and Mandy Patinkin ***
Follies *** 1/2
Fragments ***
Galileo with F. Murray Abraham **
The Gershwins' Porgy And Bess *** 1/2
Godspell ** 1/2
Goodbar * 1/2
Hair ***
Hand To God ***
Hero: The Musical * 1/2
How The World Began * 1/2
Hugh Jackman: Back On Broadway ***
Hurt Village ***Irving Berlin's White Christmas ***
It's Always Right Now, Until It's Later *** 1/2
King Lear at Public with Sam Waterston **
Krapp's Last Tape with John Hurt ***
The Lady From Dubuque ** 1/2Lake Water **
Leo ***
Love's Labor's Lost at the PublicLab ** 1/2
Lysistrata Jones *
The Maids **Man And Boy * 1/2
The Man Who Came To Dinner **
Maple And Vine **
Master Class w Tyne Daly ** 1/2
Measure For Measure/Shakespeare in the Park ***
Milk Like Sugar ***
Mission Drift * 1/2
Misterman ** 1/2
The Mountaintop ** 1/2
Newsies **
Painting Churches * 1/2Pigpen's The Nightmare Story *** 1/2
Once *** 1/2
Olive and The Bitter Herbs ** 1/2
On A Clear Day You Can See Forever * 1/2
One Arm ***
Other Desert Cities on Broadway ** 1/2
Private Lives **
Queen Of The Mist ** 1/2
Radio City Christmas Spectacular ** 1/2
Relatively Speaking * 1/2
Richard III w Kevin Spacey at BAM ***
The Road To Mecca ** 1/2
Samuel & Alasdair: A Personal History Of The Robot War ** 1/2
The Select (The Sun Also Rises) ** 1/2
Seminar **
Septimus & Clarissa *** 1/2
Shlemiel The First ** 1/2
Silence! The Musical * 1/2
69 Degrees South * 1/2
Song From The Uproar **
Sons Of The Prophet *** 1/2
Sontag: Reborn *
Spiderman: Turn Off The Dark * 1/2
Standing On Ceremony: The Gay Marriage Plays **
Stick Fly **
The Submission **
Super Night Shot ** 1/2
Sweet and Sad **
The Table ** 1/2
Titus Andronicus at Public with Jay O. Sanders * 1/2
Tribes *** 1/2
The Ugly One **
Unnatural Acts ***
Venus In Fur ***
We Live Here **
Wild Animals You Should Know ** 1/2
Wit ** 1/2
Zarkana **
NEW YORK MUSICAL THEATRE FESTIVAL 2011
Blanche: The Bittersweet Life Of A Wild Prairie Dame *** 1/2
Central Avenue Breakdown ** 1/2
Crazy, Just Like Me ***
Cyclops: A Rock Opera *
Ennio: The Living Paper Cartoon ** 1/2
F---ing Hipsters **
Ghostlight **
Gotta Getta Girl ** 1/2 for staged reading
Greenwood *
Jack Perry Is Alive (And Dating) * 1/2
Kiki Baby ** 1/2
Kissless * 1/2
Madame X **
The Pigeon Boys ***
Time Between Us * 1/2
Tut **
FRINGEFEST NYC 2011
Araby *
The Bardy Bunch **
Books On Tape ** 1/2
Civilian **
Hard Travelin' With Woody ***
Leonard Cohen Koans *** 1/2
The More Loving One **
The Mountain Song *** 1/2
Paper Cuts ***
Parker & Dizzy's Fabulous Journey To The End Of The Rainbow ** 1/2
Pearl's Gone Blue ***
Rachel Calof ** 1/2
Romeo & Juliet: Choose Your Own Ending **
2 Burn * 1/2
Walls and Bridges **
What The Sparrow Said ** 1/2
Yeast Nation ***
Thanks for reading. Michael Giltz is the cohost of Showbiz Sandbox , a weekly pop culture podcast that
reveals the industry take on entertainment news of the day and features top journalists and opinion
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04:15 PM on 03/18/2012
The stories are out of sync with todays society, they're dated. These stories need revamping and
updating, total reworks actually with their perspectives tweaked.
04:49 PM on 03/17/2012
I can see a revival of "The Man Who Came To Dinner" but it really needs a powerhouse actor to
play Sheridan Whiteside. The American Academy of Dramatic Arts did it once long ago--fail. Thenthere was even a musical of it with Dolores Gray which was terrible. I forget who played Whiteside
and obviously because his performance was highly forgettable. There's a cast recording now finally
released of it but the most entertaining song sung by the maid--the opening number--was left out.
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