Showing posts with label The Waverly Gallery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Waverly Gallery. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 19, 2022

At This Theatre: The John Golden Theatre

I love the theaters on 45th Street. I've seen some of my favorite shows on that block. The Golden Theatre is probably the one of those that I have been in the fewest times, but those times have yielded some of the most truly magnificent performances I've ever seen. Even though I have ranked the six shows I've seen there, on any given day any one of them could be my number one pick. They were all that good.

At This Theater:
The John Golden

In the times Mike and I have been there, we have been able to sit in a variety of locations. We hope that our experiences will help you the next time you are At This Theatre.

# of Shows We Saw There: 6

      

      


Shows We Saw There: Avenue Q, Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike, The Normal Heart, The Waverly Gallery, A Doll's House, Part 2, Three Tall Women

How They Rate:


6. A Doll's House, Part 2:
 An embarrassment of acting riches, the entire cast was a thrill to watch. Condola Rashad and Jane Houdyshell were amazing in their supporting roles and offer a study in varying intensity, with the former mostly quiet and measured, and the latter more intense and razor sharp in her delivery. The star of the show, Laurie Metcalf, was simply stunning to watch, giving one of my favorite performances in nearly 40 years of Broadway theater-going.

WHERE WE SAT: Center front mezzanine about 5 rows back on the aisle: excellent view, if not a little bit cramped.



5. Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike:
 
Here's a show Mike and I did not see together. He enjoyed it with Julie White. I enjoyed seeing one of my favorite actors, Sigourney Weaver, who showed me why she's such a highly regarded interpreter of Christopher Durang. David Hyde Pierce was a riot, with his monologue a true highlight, and Kristine Nielson was quirky fun, too. Even in smaller roles Billy Magnussen and Shalita Grant made lasting impressions.

WHERE WE SAT: Mike sat in the rear orchestra, with a great view of everything but the very top of the set. I sat up in the rear mezzanine, and had a terrific view - no one seemed far away at all.



4. Three Tall Women:
 I don't recall either of us moving an inch or even breathing throughout this mesmerizing play. Sure that set change was breathtaking, but that trio of performances was pure brilliance. Glenda Jackson stole the show in a lot of ways, but Laurie Metcalf was equally brilliant in different ways. And Alison Pill was no slouch, either - hers was a turn that snuck up on you! Absolutely one of my favorite plays.

WHERE WE SAT: Center front mezzanine about 5 rows back on the aisle: excellent view, if not a little bit cramped.



3. The Waverly Gallery:
 The two greatest performances I have ever witnessed happened at this theater. One of them, Elaine May as a woman sinking under the weight of her own dementia, was perhaps THE greatest. I've never so believed what I was seeing was actually real before or since then. Perhaps even better was the chance to see her co-stars rise to her challenge - particularly Joan Allen as her daughter and Lucas Hedges, one of the best the current generation has to offer, as her grandson. 

WHERE WE SAT: Side left front mezz, about 4 rows back on the aisle: excellent view.



2. The Normal Heart:
 This may be the one time I wish we had been a little closer to fully take in the intimate performances of this first-rate ensemble. Not a weak link in the bunch, they were a thrill to watch. However, it was the performance of Tony-winner Ellen Barkin that was a privilege to witness. The two finest acting performances I have ever seen were both in this theater. What a blessing.

WHERE WE SAT: Side left front mezz, about 4 rows back on the aisle: excellent view.



1. Avenue Q:
 Over the many times we saw it, we got to see many of the original cast (with Ann Harada a particular standout). This show was consistently a well cast show, with replacements (and understudies) being as good, if not better than their predecessors. Among the great performers we got to see were Anika Larsen, Mary Faber, Haneefah Wood and Rob McLure. Perhaps the best were Barrett Foa who was replaced mid-performance by Howie Michael Smith. Always charming as it is, here's hoping future revivals don't srcub it too clean.

WHERE WE SAT: We saw this show several times; center orchestra was probably my favorite, as it allowed us to see the smallest of details and facial expressions. But being upstairs was great, too, allowing a better view everything at once, as well as some of the bigger things like "giant" Kate Monster.

Wednesday, November 7, 2018

REVIEW: The Waverly Gallery

Review of the Saturday, November 3, 2018 matinee performance at the John Golden Theatre in New York City. Starring Elaine May, Lucas Hedges, Joan Allen, Michael Cera and David Cromer. Written by Kenneth Lonergan. Scenic design by David Zinn. Lighting design by Brian MacDevitt. Costume design by Ann Roth. Sound design by Leon Rothenberg. Direction by Lila Neugebauer. 2 hours, 15 minutes, including one intermission.

Grade: A+

Kenneth Lonergan's Pulitzer Prize-finalist play, The Waverly Gallery, has finally arrived on Broadway, and it was certainly worth the wait. Save for the occasional direct address to the audience, the work is harsh in its realistic naturalism.  The characters talk over each other, often changing subject mid-sentence (and not just its suffering main character), and frequently in a maddening monotone that forces you to pay even more attention to the actors for visual clues as to how the characters are actually feeling. Most of the time, it feels like we are observing lives through a window. I imagine it was difficult rehearsing this play, nearly devoid of oral artifice and "theatricality." And a lot of credit for making it so compelling from start to finish must go to director Lila Neugebauer. What a debut. It is amazing that such a heartbreaking play can also be so entertaining.

David Zinn's meticulously detailed settings easily evoke a Greenwich Village in transition in the late 80's/early 90's, and Ann Roth's costumes are equally evocative. Between scenes, Tal Yarden's projections offer up memories of a New York City of other times, fading in on one one of the wall, filling it up, then fading away on the other end. Some are fuzzy, others are from odd points of view, and one is particularly clear and lasts the longest, but fades out the fastest. We are watching dementia play out in front of us. A nice touch.

Though his metaphors are occasionally obvious (an anxious dog vying for attention while everyone ignores it, for example), Lonergan's play is a brave mix of sentimentality and harsh reality. This family (and an unsuspecting stranger) shows all of the varying strains of life dealing with the slow, agonizing decline of a sweet woman suffering from dementia.  The assembled cast nails these variations - the highs and lows, the frustration and rare happy moment. The result is a thoroughly engrossing, emotional ride that will leave you spent but thrilled.

Frequent Lonergan interpreter Michael Cera has a tough assignment. He's the outsider who is painfully oblivious - both in his ridiculous optimism that he'll be a successful artist, despite a lack of patrons, and his refusal to see that his benefactress isn't as deaf as she is losing her mental faculties. Cera's delivery allows us to be annoyed and interested in him. Actor-director David Cromer bridges the gap between fed up and pragmatic as the husband married into this escalating crisis. He's funny in his directness and sweet in his gentle handling of his ailing mother-in-law.

After a couple of days of reflection, I find myself frequently thinking of Joan Allen's gripping, raw honesty. As the daughter of the victim, she is a ball of exposed nerves who uses an array of coping techniques just to keep her emotions in check and still survive. We see it all: cruel lashing out in frustration, removing herself tearfully from the scene, wistfully looking at her mother for any sign of improvement or even a few seconds of clarity. Then there's the heartbreaking moment when she admits out loud that she wishes her mother would die - a statement that is equal parts compassion for all the suffering and selfish desire for all of it to be over at last. The house was filled with sniffles and stifled sobs as she finally broke down then felt an almost immediate sense of guilt.

Making his Broadway debut is Oscar nominee (for Lonergan's Manchester By the Sea) Lucas Hedges. He's the narrator/playwright stand-in who shares the primary caregiver duties with his mother by living next door to his failing grandmother. Hedges' low key performance mirrors his character's desire for calm normalcy - he constantly refers to things he does with her in repetition, and you get that that repetition is as much for him as it is for her. Watching him struggle with ignoring her for his own sanity, and almost always caving in because he loves her so much is heartbreaking. This is a fine debut, and I hope we see more of him on stage and soon.

Of course, the draw here is really Elaine May, who is, indeed, every bit the legend everyone claims she is. She is giving one of those performances that people will be talking about for decades. It was truly a privilege to witness this live. Watching her being simultaneously fragile and strong is as thrilling as it is devastating. Perhaps the most amazing thing about her performance is just how natural it is. This is that rare performance where one can honestly say it is as if she isn't even acting. She shook me to my core, leaving me physically aching with sadness. Ms. May has set the bar a step higher.

What an absolute thrill.

#1934

Wednesday, October 17, 2018

Welcome To The Theater! The Broadway Debuts in Plays October/November

Over the next three weeks, five new plays are opening, and with four of them come twenty-five Broadway debuts! The cast of the fifth, The Lifespan of a Fact, is made up entirely of veterans. In any case, today we celebrate these performers.

Here's to great reviews, a terrific run and many more Broadway Opening Nights! Congratulations to all of you.

THE FERRYMAN
Opening Night: Sunday, October 21, 2018
Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre

Dean Ashton (Frank Magennis)   Paddy Considine (Quinn Carney)

Charles Dale (Father Horrigan)   Justin Edwards (Tom Kettle)

Fra Fee (Michael Carney)   Tom Glynn-Carney (Shane Corcoran)

Stuart Graham (Muldoon)   Mark Lambert (Uncle Patrick Carney)

Carla Langley (Shena Carney)   Matilda Lawler (Honor Carney)

Rob Malone (Oisin Carney)   Michael Quinton McArthur (Declan Carney)

Genevieve O'Reilly (Mary Carney)   Glenn Speers (Lawrence Malone)

Niall Wright (James Joseph "JJ" Carney)   Gina Costigan (Understudy)

Carly Gold (Understudy)   Holly Gould (Understudy)

Bella May Mordus (Understudy)   Griffin Osborne (Understudy)

THE WAVERLY GALLERY
Opening Night: Thursday, October 25, 2018
John Golden Theatre

Lucas Hedges (Daniel Reed)

Brian Miskell (Understudy)

TORCH SONG
Opening Night: Thursday, November 1, 2018
Helen Hayes Theatre 

Ward Horton (Ed)   Rob Morean (Understudy)

AMERICAN SON
Opening Night: Sunday, November 4, 2018
Helen Hayes Theatre 

Amelia Workman (Understudy)

#1919
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