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Blu-rays of the Week
Blue Valentine
(Anchor Bay)
Derek Cianfrance’s exploration of the inevitable breakdown of a marriage can’t avoid the melodramatic clichés that affect most movies in this genre, but the writer-director is lucky (or smart) enough to have two of America’s most unaffected performers to soulfully enact two people trying, but failing, to re-connect. Although Michelle Williams received a deserved Best Actress Oscar nomination, that Ryan Gosling was ignored doesn’t mean he’s any less superb: they play off each other so self-effacingly and subtly that they seem like a real couple that has a lot of water under the bridge. The movie’s graininess, which mirrors the relationship gone astray, is well captured on Blu-ray; extras include director and editor commentary, a making-of and deleted scenes.
Growing up thinking dance to consisted of ethnic folk and ballet, seeing dance performance was a definite experience. After seeing it, I’m sorry I didn’t see more of them earlier and plan to seek out many more. So kudos to Shannon Gillen for her incredible Clap for the Wolfman, she made a convert out of a skeptic like me.
A modern dance performance, Clap for the Wolfman is a Rorschach test of what you want it to mean for yourself. I see it as an exploration of the human body, and the amazing feats long years of dance training can achieve. The five dancers leap elegantly, flowing from move to move without hesitation in a way that celebrates pushing oneself to the limits.
At certain points, I winced, sure that someone would going to snap in half like a pretzel and amazed at the ease in which they performed such contortions. With incredible lighting effects, a little theatre with few props seemed to change into various scenes almost instantly. The dancers supply many of the sound effects as they perform a 50 minute piece of modern choreography.
Although dance performance can seem snobbish and intellectual to most people who just want to be entertained, Wolfman is extremely laid back and approachable, everyone looks like they are having a wonderful time and the mood is infectious. This is likely due to the collaborative effort the show is, with Miss Gillen applying over ten years of choreography experience and picking magnificent dancers who participated in the progress.
“The show is as much about them, if I had different dancers, it would be an entirely different show,” Miss Gillen said proudly, as she rushed over to congratulate the dancers. It would be rude to single out one of them, as the troupe moved together seamlessly and all deserve equal credit for their amazing skills.
A wonderful way to spend the evening, and one leaves the theatre pretty impressed with the abilities of fellow humans. I look forward to seeing more of their upcoming work.
I Clap for the Wolfman
Choreographed by Shannon Gillen
Lighting design by Michael Ingle
Performed by Genna Baroni, Xan Burley, Frances Chiaverini, Janna Diamond, Kristin Swiat
Growing up thinking dance to consisted of ethnic folk and ballet, seeing dance performance was a definite experience. After seeing it, I’m sorry I didn’t see more of them earlier and plan to seek out many more. So kudos to Shannon Gillen for her incredible Clap for the Wolfman, she made a convert out of a skeptic like me.
A modern dance performance, Clap for the Wolfman is a Rorschach test of what you want it to mean for yourself. I see it as an exploration of the human body, and the amazing feats long years of dance training can achieve.
The five dancers leap elegantly, flowing from move to move without hesitation in a way that celebrates pushing oneself to the limits. At certain points, I winced, sure that someone would going to snap in half like a pretzel and amazed at the ease in which they performed such contortions.
With incredible lighting effects, a little theater with few props seemed to change into various scenes almost instantly. The dancers supply many of the sound effects as they perform a 50 minute piece of modern choreography.
Although dance performance can seem snobbish and intellectual to most people who just want to be entertained, Wolfman is extremely laid back and approachable, everyone looks like they are having a wonderful time and the mood is infectious.
This is likely due to the collaborative effort the show is, with Ms. Gillen applying over ten years of choreography experience and picking magnificent dancers who participated in the progress.
"The show is as much about them, if I had different dancers, it would be an entirely different show," Ms. Gillen said proudly, as she rushed over to congratulate the dancers. It would be rude to single out one of them, as the troupe moved together seamlessly and all deserve equal credit for their amazing skills.
A wonderful way to spend the evening, and one leaves the theatre pretty impressed with the abilities of fellow humans.
Tickets are available online at http://www.shannongillen.com/Site/home.html or at the theatre, 45 minutes before the show begins.
I Clap for the Wolfman
May 12 - 14, 2011
St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery:
Ontological-Hysteric Theater
131 E 10th St
New York City
212-674-8112
Opened May 12, 2011; closes May 14, 2011
A Minister’s Wife
Conceived and Directed by Michael Halberstam
Based on Candida by George Bernard Shaw
Adapted by Austin Pendleton
Lyrics by Jan Levy Tranen
Music by Joshua Schmidt
Starring Liz Baltes, Kate Fry, Drew Gehling, Marc Kudisch, Bobby Steggert
There is already a classic musical based on a George Bernard Shaw play: My Fair Lady, of course, from Pygmalion. But can lightning strike twice?
Judging by A Minister’s Wife, the answer is no. Despite a talented pedigree, this frustratingly bland chamber musical only reminds us how much richer is Shaw’s original, Candida, unencumbered by characters continuously breaking into song, which only breaks up the piercing wit and logic of Shaw’s ever-relevant arguments about men, women, politics, religion and society.
Another of Shaw’s serious comedies, Candida takes the pulse of a marriage between the socialist Reverend Morrell and his free-spirited wife, Candida. That he takes her for granted is noticed by immature young poet Eugene Marchbanks, who cannot fathom why she would stay in what strikes him as a lopsided relationship. When Marchbanks tells Morrell that he and Candida are in love, the Reverend decides to test both of them. Will Candida choose familiar comfort (Morrell) or youthful passion (Marchbanks)?
The skeleton of Shaw’s compassionate character dissection remains in A Minister’s Wife, but Joshua Schmidt’s pleasant but unhummable songs intrude too often on Austin Pendleton’s adaptation. Occasionally, the music elaborates on Shaw’s insights ("Enchantment" springs to mind), but mostly it replaces Shaw’s sparkling dialogue with rote tunes and Jan Levy Tranen’s pedestrian lyrics, an unfortunate trade-off.
Michael Halberstam‛s estimable staging, which helps this 90-minute-long chamber-music riff pass by uneventfully (if uninspiringly), comprises Allen Moyle’s cluttered set, Keith Parham’s suggestive lighting and David Zinn’s exacting costumes.
The quartet of musicians -- violinist Pasquale Laurino, cellist Laura Bontrager, clarinetist Jonathan Levine and pianist Timothy Splain, who also conducts -- performs behind a scrim, an elegantly subtle touch.
The excellent acting quintet is led by Marc Kudisch, who compensates for a wavering British accent with a powerful baritone that gives Morrell an advantage over the honeyed tenor of Bobby Steggert, who comes off even younger than the 18-year-old Shaw asks for.
Kate Fry’s charming and sweet-voiced Candida rounds out the main trio, while the smaller roles of Reverend Mill and Morrell’s assistant Prosperine are capably taken by Drew Gehling and Liz Baltes. Candida’s father, who provides a necessary sounding board in Candida, has been excised from A Minister’s Wife, another regrettable misstep.
A Minister’s Wife
Mitzi E. Newhouse Theater
Lincoln Center Theater
150 West 65th Street
New York City
212-239-6200
www.lct.org
Opened May 8, 2011; closes June 12, 2011