2/24/2020 POPSURFING.COM: THEA TER: T wo Of Our Best Playwrights Return T o NYC popsurfing.blogspot.com/2019/12/theater -two-of-our -best-playwrights.html 1/7FRIDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2019 THEATER: Two Of Our Best Playwrights Return To NYC THE THIN PLACE ** 1/2 out of **** PLAYWRIGHTS HORIZONS DANIEL KITSON: KEEP ** 1/2 out of **** ST.</p><p> ANN'S WAREHOUSE It's the end of the year, the end of the decade and the lists keep coming.</p><p> Clearly, I am very aware of what everyone else believes to be the best shows of the decade, but what did I think? Intrigued or bullied or most likely just procrastinating before writing a review (not this one!) I pored over my lists of each and every work of theater I've seen since 2010.</p><p> Grabbing together all the shows I gave three and a half stars or a very rare four stars, the result was a good pile of stuff and some happy memories.</p><p> Certain names popped up again and again: PigPen Theater Co., Philip Glass, Bedlam, Mark Rylance, Harriet Walter, Lucas Knath and Daniel Kitson.</p><p> PigPen is a theater company/rock band poised to find its biggest audience yet with their new show The Tale of Desperaux.</p><p> I finally saw all three of composer Philip Glass's "portrait operas" thanks to remarkable revivals of Satyagraha in 2011, Einstein On The Beach in 2012 and -- just under the wire -- Akhnaten a few weeks ago.</p><p> Bedlam created some of the best revivals, pivoted to bold new works and has now fissioned into two companies one hopes will produce twice as much heat.</p><p> Rylance and Walter are obviously two of the best actors around.</p><p> And Hnath and Kitson are two of our best playwrights.</p><p> Watching Lucas Hnath produce one intriguing, thoughtful, playful work after another; seeing him smartly create pieces that are challenging but easy to produce for companies around the country (he's no fool); marveling as he grew in reputation until his triumphant Broadway debut with the brilliant, Tony-winning A Doll's House, Part 2 has been a thrill.</p><p> This is exactly how it's supposed to work.MICHAEL GILTZ AT WORK Michael Giltz is a freelance writer based in NYC and can be reached at mgiltz@pipeline.com FAVORITE LINKS Americablog Five O'Clock Lightning baseball blog Deep Pop -- Lori Lakin's Blog The Back Page -- Jason Page on ESPN Radio Cine-Blog -- George Robinson's Blog Documents On Art & Cinema - Daryl Chin's Blog Brucie G's Wondrous Blog Of Adventure and Mystery -- Bruce Greenspan's Blog BLOG ARCHIVE ► 2020 (2) ▼ 2019 (95) ▼ December (8) More Create Blog Sign In2/24/2020 POPSURFING.COM: THEA TER: T wo Of Our Best Playwrights Return T o NYC popsurfing.blogspot.com/2019/12/theater -two-of-our -best-playwrights.html 2/7Daniel Kitson creates and performs his own pieces and would likely hide at home rather than appear on Broadway.</p><p> Like Hnath, Kitson has his own regional support system to try out and refine new pieces.</p><p> But his goal is not greater and greater attention.</p><p> He keeps ticket prices and production costs low, always, and that gives him the freedom to do precisely what he wants.</p><p> The result is a remarkable body of work I might compare to Spalding Gray or Eric Bogosian but that's wrong.</p><p> It's not confessional or personal; it's certainly not stand-up (which Kitson also does) though I think of him and Eddie Izzard in the same breath.</p><p> It's work that is uniquely his own -- funny, piercing, deeply human, sneakily complex and open-hearted.</p><p> Any time Hnath or Kitson come to NYC with a new show, it's an event.</p><p> Neither quite sticks the landing in their new piece.</p><p> But I wouldn't miss either of them, ever.</p><p> First, the Hnath.</p><p> Lucas Hnath's new play is stripped down to almost the bare essentials.</p><p> The stage is bare and unadorned.</p><p> The set consists of two chairs with a small table between them.</p><p> The cast consists of four actors.</p><p> But I think it should have been stripped down even more.</p><p> Hnath's plays love to explore public performance from scientific debate (Isaac's Eye ) to the Sunday sermon ( The Christians ) to a reading ( A Public Reading Of An Unproduced Screenplay About The Death Of Walt Disney ).</p><p> Now with The Thin Place he tackles one of the oldest performance genres of all: the ghost story.</p><p> Hilda slips onto the stage rather apologetically, carrying a cup of tea.</p><p> She sits down and begins to talk.</p><p> A lonely child, a beloved grandmother who played games where they tried to read each other's minds and -- when the grandmother dies -- secret seances where the child Hilda tries to pierce the veil to the other side.</p><p> She tries and fails to find the thin place, that rare physical location where this world and the next rub shoulders.The Movies, Books, Theater, Concerts, CDs I Saw/Re...</p><p> THEATER: Two Of Our Best Playwrights Return To NYC...</p><p> THEATER: THE GOOD NEWS, OR AT LEAST ONE FOURTH OF ...</p><p> THEATER: Reviewing The Revue Of Maury Yeston THEATER: "Barber Shop Chronicles" Offers A Clean S...</p><p> Theater Best Of The 2010s BookFilter Reading List TV and Film Must Watch List ► November (10) ► October (18) ► September (10) ► August (9) ► July (7) ► June (3) ► May (6) ► April (10) ► March (5) ► February (1) ► January (8) ► 2018 (35) ► 2017 (6) ► 2016 (2) ► 2015 (21) ► 2014 (2) ► 2013 (5) ► 2012 (17) ► 2011 (15) ► 2010 (10) ► 2009 (43) ► 2008 (86) ► 2007 (781) ► 2006 (2412) ► 2005 (5) Trailer: The Thin PlaceTrailer: The Thin Place2/24/2020 POPSURFING.COM: THEA TER: T wo Of Our Best Playwrights Return T o NYC popsurfing.blogspot.com/2019/12/theater -two-of-our -best-playwrights.html 3/7As an adult, Hilda discovers and becomes fascinated by Linda, a real psychic with a gift for talking to those who have passed over.</p><p> Hilda becomes a devotee and then a disciple and then perhaps a friend of Linda.</p><p> And as Hilda tells her story, Linda strides onto the stage, almost indifferent to Hilda and us.</p><p> We are beneath her notice or perhaps merely beside the point.</p><p> Linda carries the story forward and their onstage pas de deux is intriguing, a little mystifying and even creepy.</p><p> Then Linda carefully makes clear to Hilda that what she does isn't exactly real.</p><p> She doesn't say, "I'm a fraud" exactly.</p><p> But you can't help sitting up straight and wondering how the gullible and odd Hilda will react to Linda patiently explain how she does what she does.</p><p> It's a genuine service and provides comfort to her clients.</p><p> But she's not precisely speaking to the dead so much as telling the living what they desperately want to hear: you are loved, I forgive you, there is something more than this life.</p><p> And then two more people burst onto the stage.</p><p> Jerry and Sylvia are friends of the psychic Linda, which is no surprise since you don't imagine Hilda has any friends to speak of.</p><p> Suddenly, all sorts of new threads are introduced: Linda is working as a consultant for a politician, Sylvia supports Linda financially and is clearly jealous of Linda's new friendship (and perhaps romance) with Hilda.</p><p> Just when we get a handle on these interlopers, they fade away and we get back to the purpose at hand, telling a spooky tale.</p><p> Despite a few effective bumps in the night, that final story didn't get under my skin.</p><p> It's easy to imagine Hnath had a two-hander, got stuck and decided to give his story a jolt by having two new characters barge their way in.</p><p> But a ghost story needs a relentless focus and distractions are not welcome.</p><p> Since everything Jerry and Sylvia introduce is beside the point, it's a shame Hnath didn't disappear them and stick with what works so well here: the complicated and uncertain relationship between Linda and Hilda.</p><p> I think the technical team and director Les Waters gave Hnath everything he wanted, though I'd need to return to the show to decide how I felt about a few abrupt touches.</p><p> And while it's easy to think Mimi Lien could hardly go wrong with a bare stage, two chairs and a table, they feel like exactly the right two chairs and table.</p><p> Oana Botez's costumes are also perfectly judged.</p><p> As the two interlopers, Triney Sandoval and Kelly McAndrew do what they can with limited roles and no certain purpose.</p><p> But Emily Cass McDonnell is very good as the unobtrusive Hilda, a character that recedes into the background as much as possible while always making her presence felt. (After a long stretch of saying nothing, when Hilda finally speaks up at a party the effect is hilarious.) And Randy Danson is a treat as the psychic Linda, commanding the stage with aplomb from start to finish.</p><p> Her British by way of the Caribbean (?) accent wavers a bit, but it doesn't matter.</p><p> I generously took that as adding to the unreliability of everything Linda says, though the dodgy accent is2/24/2020 POPSURFING.COM: THEA TER: T wo Of Our Best Playwrights Return T o NYC popsurfing.blogspot.com/2019/12/theater -two-of-our -best-playwrights.html 4/7not intentional.</p><p> Danson is wonderful, utterly convincing as she explains away her psychic gifts one minute and just as passionately defends them the next.</p><p> I can't read minds, but just as Hnath worked again with Laurie Metcalfe I'll bet he'll find another piece to showcase Danson's talents soon.</p><p> And now Kitson.</p><p> He's a busy man, doing stand-up, hosting benefit shows with other comics, deejaying on his local radio station for two weeks every year and traveling the globe doing his "story shows." His Wikipedia page gives a sense of that prodigious output.</p><p> I've sadly never seen his stand-up and while gladly catching every single work of theater he's staged in NYC, that still means I haven't seen half of what he's done.</p><p> So any guess as to the shape of his career is naturally blinkered.</p><p> The likely mistaken impression I've received is that increasingly passionate critical raves were a little unsettling to Kitson.</p><p> Wary of adulation or simply believing his success was coming too easily, he turned his Rube Goldberg-like plays into truly dense Borgesian contraptions.</p><p> And if god forbid he felt a climax proving too emotional or touching, Kitson ran in the other direction.</p><p> Bollocks.</p><p> His plays have always been dauntingly complex, despite the ease with which he pulls them off.</p><p> And though it briefly seemed Kitson was trying to make things difficult for himself (one show involved reel- to-reel machines with pre-recorded bits; it didn't work), he's delivered the goods before and since.</p><p> In 2014 (just five years ago), Kitson created his most open-hearted piece with A Show For Christmas.</p><p> And four of his plays are among my favorites of the 2010s, more than any other artist.</p><p> Keep won't be on it, but it's often very funny.</p><p> The stage is bare and plunged into darkness except for a table and chair and behind that a filing cabinet with dozens of drawers containing index cards.</p><p> Kitson tells us he spent six months cataloguing every single item in his rambling home.</p><p> Each item gets one index card.</p><p> And he's going to read them off to us, one by one.</p><p> It will, he assures, have a fascinating cumulative power but it's not for the faint-hearted.</p><p> If you want to leave, by all means do so now and you'll get a full refund.</p><p> And then he begins.</p><p> Problems ensue and with them pleasures.</p><p> The shape of the show slowly reveals itself, along with what seem to be digressions and diversions and casual improvisations.</p><p> By and large, not a word is wasted since we realize every offhand comment has a purpose.</p><p> The audience -- fans one and all -- are with him every step of the way, laughing at jokes that are set-up with an aside at one moment and then landed with a quick jab maybe half an hour later.</p><p> It demands attention and receives it.</p><p> Kitson's plays are often labyrinthian pieces, letting us wander through his idiosyncratic worldview.</p><p> But at the heart of the maze is not some minotaur-like beast, but a willingness to embrace humanity in all its quirks and failings.</p><p> They often click into place with a delightful snap at2/24/2020 POPSURFING.COM: THEA TER: T wo Of Our Best Playwrights Return T o NYC popsurfing.blogspot.com/2019/12/theater -two-of-our -best-playwrights.html 5/7the end, like placing the final piece of a puzzle into place.</p><p> That doesn't quite happen here, for some stray details muddy the effect and confuse the finale.</p><p> If I sound like the Emperor in Amadeus by declaring Keep has "too many drawers!" it's not because the show needs to be shorter, as such.</p><p> It's because once we know the shape it's taking, filling in the dots should happen as quickly as possible.</p><p> I'd spend hours in Kitson's brain but once we know where we're going the play needs to get there quicker.</p><p> And yet, what a performer.</p><p> I often think of Kitson the writer and Kitson the wit.</p><p> But I don't often think of Kitson the actor.</p><p> His pieces are fiendishly elaborate and difficult; Keep might just be the trickiest of all to pull off.</p><p> A lifetime of stand-up, of delivering complex stories with ease and of winning over an audience to the challenges he's going to set them allows Kitson to be at his best here.</p><p> Keep may not be a keeper, but Kitson along with Hnath remains on the short list of artists I'd follow anywhere.</p><p> THEATER OF 2019 Frankenstein: Under The Radar Fest at the Public ** 1/2 Minor Character: Under The Radar Festival at the Public *** Ink: Under The Radar Festival at the Public ** 1/2 Choir Boy ** 1/2 White Noise ** 1/2 Kiss Me, Kate *** Ain't No Mo' *** 1/2 Ain't Too Proud ** The Cradle Will Rock * 1/2 Mrs.</p><p> Murray's Menagerie *** 1/2 Oklahoma! (on Broadway) ** 1/2 Socrates ** The Pain Of My Belligerence * Burn This ** Hadestown *** 1/2 All My Sons * 1/2 Tootsie ** 1/2 Ink *** Beetlejuice ** Estado Vegetal *** Hans Christian Andersen * 1/2 Cirque du Soleil: Luzia *** BLKS ** 1/2 Moulin Rouge ** 1/2 Bat Out Of Hell ** Unchilding ** Sea Wall/ A Life ** 1/2 Harry Potter and the Cursed Child *** Betrayal *** 1/2 Fifty Million Frenchmen ** 1/22/24/2020 POPSURFING.COM: THEA TER: T wo Of Our Best Playwrights Return T o NYC popsurfing.blogspot.com/2019/12/theater -two-of-our -best-playwrights.html 6/7Freestyle Love Supreme ** 1/2 Derren Brown: Secret *** (A)loft Modulation * 1/2 The Great Society ** I Can't See * Heroes Of The Fourth Turning ** 1/2 Chasing Rainbows: The Road To Oz *** The Glass Menagerie (dir Austin Pendleton & Peter Bloch) ** Terra Firma (debut of The Coop theater company) ** Forbidden Broadway: The Next Generation *** Dublin Carol ** 1/2 Soft Power ** The Decline and Fall of The Entire World As Seen Through The Eyes Of Cole Porter *** For Colored Girls ** 1/2 Scotland, PA ** The Sound Inside *** (great cast, clumsy ending) User Not Found ** Enchanted April ** DruidShakespeare: Richard III * 1/2 Broadbend, Arkansas ** Einstein's Dreams * 1/2 The Crucible (by Bedlam) *** 1/2 Pump Girl *** A Christmas Carol (Bway w Campbell Scott) ** Barber Shop Chronicles *** Anything Can Happen In The Theater: The Musical World of Maury Yeston ** 1/2 The Gospel Of John ** 1/2 The Thin Place ** 1/2 Daniel Kitson: Keep ** 1/2 Thanks for r eading.</p><p> Michael Giltz is the cr eator of BookFilter , a book lover ’s best friend.</p><p> It’s a website that lets you br owse for books online the way you do in a physical bookstor e, provides compr ehensive info on new r eleases every week in every category and offers passionate personal r ecommendations every step of the way .</p><p> He’s also the cohost of Showbiz Sandbox , a weekly pop cultur e podcast that r eveals the industry take on entertainment news of the day with top journalists and opinion makers as guests.</p><p> It’ s available for fr ee on iT unes.</p><p> Visit Michael Giltz at his website .</p><p> Download his podcast of celebrity interviews and his radio show , also called Popsurfing and also available for free on iT unes.</p><p> POSTED BY MICHAEL GILTZ AT 6:44 PM NO COMMENTS: Post a Comment LINKS TO THIS POST Create a Link2/24/2020 POPSURFING.COM: THEA TER: T wo Of Our Best Playwrights Return T o NYC popsurfing.blogspot.com/2019/12/theater -two-of-our -best-playwrights.html 7/7Newer Post Older Post Home Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)