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Theater Shake And Bake Loves Labour Lost

📄 Theater Shake And Bake Loves Labour Lost

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More Create Blog Sign In FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2018 THEATER: "Love's Labour's Lost"...But A Good Meal Is Never Wasted SHAKE AND BAKE: LOVE'S LABOUR'S LOST *** (but knock off half a star if you skip the alcohol) SHAKE AND BAKE THEATER What hath Tolstoy wrought? Ever since a musical version of War and Peace tossed some so-so appetizers and a shot of vodka at theater- goers and called it a meal, it seems like any offbeat show trying tostand out thinks, "What about food?" And while the food at the immersive Natasha, Pierre and the Great Comet of 1812 was the least of it, certainly the alcohol can't hear.</p><p> Most any show is improved by a drink during the interval. (Though who can afford the typical prices ofa Broadway bar?) Still, while the idea of dinner theater done with panache isn't precisely a bad one, it's not terribly good either when the food feels like subpar catering.</p><p> Happily, that is not the case with the meat-packing district presentation of Shakespeare's Love's Labour's Lost.</p><p> The title Shake and Bake is amusing, the food was more substantial than one usually gets (akin to a full meal rather than the hyped-up canapé or twousually proferred) and the choice of play was wryly amusing.</p><p> Shakespeare's early comedy involves a king and his friends pledging to AVOID good food and drink and merrymaking in general so they can devote three years to sober study.</p><p> Good for them! They will eat justone meal a day.</p><p> They'll even fast one day a week.</p><p> They'll sleep onlythree hours a night.</p><p> And they won't even lay eyes on a woman, muchless woo them.</p><p> Good luck with that.</p><p> Their pledge lasts about as long as it takes for the Princess of France and her attendants to come to court So a play that abhors food is presented while the audience indulges in nonstop food and drink.</p><p> And a play that -- oddly for a ShakespeareMICHAEL GILTZ AT WORK Michael Giltz is a freelance writer based in NYC and can be reached atmgiltz@pipeline.com FAVORITE LINKS Americablog Five O'Clock Lightning baseball blogDeep 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 ► 2019 (7) ▼ 2018 (34) ► December (7)romance -- has a slot for music only at the very end, here features music and dance from beginning to end.</p><p> Shakespeare would approve, or at least the Groundlings would.</p><p> Matthew Goodrich and Darren Ritchie PHOTO by Chad Batka If you're a wine snob, you might want to splurge on the top ticket sincethat gets you an upgrade on the wines served (a glass of white andred).</p><p> However, I must say that even the standard wine was palatable,which is saying something since I have no nose for rosé and the like but -- if this makes any sense -- it means I'm even less accepting of a so-so wine than someone who knows what they're tasing.</p><p> The shot of Jägermeister of course can hardly go wrong.</p><p> The play began withpickled seasonal vegetables -- in our case, carrots and green beans.</p><p> Iquite liked the tart flavor of the carrots, while the green beans were snappy too.</p><p> In every case, I'd suggest diving in and consuming away; the sooner you're done, the sooner you can give your full attention tothe action. (Unless of course, an actor is right next to you.</p><p> I held off onchomping away while the clown cavorted on my couch or an actor soliloquied nearby.</p><p> I mean, just because food is on tap is no reason to be a barbarian.</p><p> One more reason to eat away? The food keeps coming.</p><p> A modest taste of salmon and cream cheese on a cracker, a fine side salad of mixed greens (of course), a Cheeto-dusted mac n cheese that was the only tricky item to consume (and really, being a mac n cheese fiend the onlyone I really felt was too small), a brisket taco served during theinterval, a pink lemonade soda palate cleanser, a roasted beetgazpacho that should also be just a smidge bigger in portion and a dessert left for us to serve ourselves as the cast slipped away -- namely a buttermilk panna cotta that was a highlight to this sweet toothedcritic.</p><p> I wouldn't want to oversell the food.</p><p> But heck, I just saw Oklahoma at St.</p><p> Ann's Warehouse and the down-home vibe of a barn social was sealed by the fact that they prepared chili and cornbread and thenserved it to the audience during the interval.</p><p> Well, I love actress Mary► November (4) ▼ October (6) THEATER: "Thunderbodies!" and the Glorious Mess of...</p><p> THEATER: 'Fact" Vs Fiction; Pale "India" THEATER: "Love's Labour's Lost"...But A Good Meal ...</p><p> THEATER: "Mother Of The Maid" Lacks Fire THEATER: "Oklahoma" Is (Just) OK THEATER: Bill Irwin Clowns (A Little), The Constit... ► September (1) ► May (5) ► April (6) ► March (4) ► February (1) ► 2017 (6) ► 2016 (2) ► 2015 (14) ► 2014 (2) ► 2013 (5) ► 2012 (18) ► 2011 (15) ► 2010 (10) ► 2009 (43) ► 2008 (86) ► 2007 (781) ► 2006 (2412) ► 2005 (5)Testa and she opened up a box of Jiffy corn muffin mix with zest and dumped it in a bowl, but she did NOT make corn break muffins.</p><p> And the crock pots lining the set, sitting tantalizingly in front of theaudience? Just for show! The muffins and chili were actually preparedelsewhere and offered up in a teeny tiny styrofoam cup with a sliver (yes, a sliver!) of cornbread laid on top that made the tasting menu of Shake and Bake look like a banquet worthy of Henry VIII incomparison.</p><p> Yes, many many shows have tossed in food and/or drink but rarely with skill.</p><p> Executive chef David Goldman and the onstage chef JeffVentricelli delivered under the far from ideal surroundings of livetheater.</p><p> Mary Glen Fredrick, Rami Margron, and Victoria Rae Sook PHOTO by Chad Batka Hmm, now what am I forgetting? Ah yes, the play.</p><p> The creative teamassuredly did not.</p><p> They chose wisely and they trimmed off the fat(which includes the longest word in the English language and the longest speech in all of Shakespeare) to deliver the meat of the play in under two hours, including a break. (I was, frankly, astonished when I looked at my watch after it was over.) They also kept the sense of theplay, by and large, though the clownish subplot of the romantic feudbetween the Spanish lord (Charles Osbourne) and Costard (who surely should be spelled Custard here and was played engagingly by Rami Margron) was set up and then mostly dropped.</p><p> That aside, the wooingand wordplay between the King's men and the Princess's women (noneof whom were interested in sticking to their various vows) came acrosseasily.</p><p> The adaptation by David Goldman, Victoria Rae Sook (who also gave herself the plumb role of the Princess and had an easy regal air) andDan Swern (who also directed) inserted all sorts of nonsense,including wall-to-wall music (from an acoustic guitar slow jam on Walk The Moon's "Shut Up and Dance" to recordings of George Michael) and a food-themed dance that included tongs as castanets.With couches and chairs lining the walls, the main stage is an open rectangular space.</p><p> So Swern's lighting in particular does heavy lifting to create scene-setting and change of moods in concert with modest props and costumes.</p><p> This version of Love's Labour's Lost, to be true, offers no great shakes in terms of insight -- just the usual hijinks a Shakespeare comedy can make an excuse for.</p><p> Yet time and again the momentum is rescued by the flow of alcohol, a tasty bite and most of all a cast that rose abovethe dashed-off proceedings with a commitment to their parts and thatdifficult balance of not taking things too seriously but not clowning for its own sake.</p><p> Darren Ritchie made a strong king and had the best chemistry of the night w Sook.</p><p> Mary Glen Fredrick and Alex Spieth made goodimpressions, even though the play as edited left them far feweropportunities to shine than the men.</p><p> Not so Osbourne who was thereal clown of the night, popping in from various unexpected angles to assay the silly Spaniard or a very fey courtier for the women (a trope that proved tiresome to me until his good nature won me over).</p><p> Likethe women, Oge Agulué made the most of a small part, bringing charmand wit to his turn as Longaville, the King's man who is wary of theentire "let's have no fun and just study" oath.</p><p> But Matthew Goodrich was the find for me, goofing and cavorting and yet taking very seriously the romantic stakes.</p><p> He convinced me this really was a playabout his character Berowne. (And he really needs a new headshotsince the one in the program doesn't do justice.) An understudy in various Broadway shows, Goodrich will get his shot.</p><p> With another shot of Jäger I would have sworn that everyone in the show will do the same! And that Shake and Bake will run for years! They'll get that break and leave the actor's lot of catering and waitering far behind.</p><p> The amusing (cruel?) irony is that here they have a good showcase and STILL don't leave waitering behind.</p><p> Here theyare delivering their lines while preparing food, serving it out, making ajoke to the audience while offering wine, declaring their love toanother character and then clearing a course away without breaking stride.</p><p> The fact that they maintained their dignity and made all this stage business flow easily -- juggling lines and remembering whichperson at table 7 had the vegan option -- was a credit to the lot ofactors everywhere and a show that caters to their many talents.</p><p> THEATER OF 2018 Homelife/The Zoo Story (at Signature) *** out of **** Escape To Margaritaville ** Broadway By The Year: 1947 and 1966 *** Lobby Hero *** Frozen ** Rocktopia * Angels in America ** 1/2 Mean Girls ** 1/2 The Sting ** Mlima's Tale ** 1/2 Children Of A Lesser God ** 1/2 Sancho: An Act Of Remembrance ** 1/2 The Metromaniacs *** Summer: The Donna Summer Musical * The Seafarer ** Henry V (Public Mobile Unit w Zenzi Williams) * 1/2 Saint Joan ** Travesties *** 1/2 Summer and Smoke ** 1/2 My Fair Lady ** 1/2 Broadway By The Year: 1956 and 1975 ** 1/2 Bernhard/Hamlet * 1/2 On Beckett *** What The Constitution Means To Me ** The Winning Side * Oklahoma ** Mother Of The Maid * Love's Labour's Lost ** 1/2 Thanks for reading.</p><p> Michael Giltz is the creator of BookFilter, a book lover’s to BookFilter! Need a smart and easy gift? Head to BookFilter ! Wondering wh categories, like cookbooks and mystery and more? Head to BookFilter! It’s a w you do in a physical bookstore, provides comprehensive info on new releases e personal recommendations every step of the way.</p><p> It’s like a fall book preview category.</p><p> He’s also the cohost of Showbiz Sandbox , a weekly pop culture podc of the day with top journalists and opinion makers as guests.</p><p> It’s available for Download his podcast of celebrity interviews and his radio show, also called P POSTED BY MICHAEL GILTZ AT 6:52 PM NO COMMENTS: Post a Comment Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)Newer Post Older Post Home