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Film and the Arts

Off-Broadway Play Reviews—Shakespeare Onstage

Richard III

Written by William Shakespeare; directed by Garry Hynes

Performances through November 23, 2019

 

Macbeth

Written by William Shakespeare; directed by John Doyle

Performances through December 15, 2019

 

Aaron Monaghan in Richard III (photo: Richard Termine)

 

There are many ways to perform Shakespeare, as two current productions demonstrate with varying degrees of success. Garry Hynes returns with her latest DruidShakespeare staging, Richard III. The story of the English king, whose deformity is as much sociopathic as it is physical, is filled with soliloquies in which Richard ingratiates himself with the audience, forcing us to engage with and even be charmed by him as he goes about committing murder and other atrocities on his way to the throne.

 

Shakespeare’s words are such that even Lady Anne—whose beloved husband was mercilessly killed by Richard—inevitably falls for Richard’s wooing. But Hynes has made her otherwise impressive Richard, Aaron Monaghan, overdo the faux friendliness and approach “wink wink nudge nudge” territory which, rather than bringing us uncomfortably close to Richard, makes it all rather risible.

 

Death in the form of a skull literally hangs over the proceedings in a box, an obvious and unnecessary visual from the otherwise no-nonsense director. Hynes’ other invention is a pit at the front of the stage—the greyscale set is by Francis O’Connor—in which the bodies of the victims of Richard’s murderous parade pile up, one by one. (Some of the executions are done with an anachronistic stun gun.) It’s inevitable that, after the climactic battle, Richard’s body is the last to fall into the pit.

 

Hynes paces the action nicely while most of the performers do well by her direction, especially Garrett Lombard as Hastings, Rory Nolan as Buckingham and Siobhán Cullen as Lady Anne. There’s also the visceral flourish of having Shakespeare’s poetry intoned by Irish actors, some with thick brogues, instead of the usual Queen’s English or flat American accents.

 

But for all its straightforwardness, this Richard III is most memorable for its lead actor’s lameness. In fact, Monaghan’s limp is so pronounced and authentic I was worried for his physical well-being by the end of the play.

 

 

Nadia Bowers and Corey Stoll in Macbeth (photo: Joan Marcus)

 

Director John Doyle has put his own stamp on many a classic musical, especially those of Stephen Sondheim. Now he’s attempting to do the same with Shakespeare, but streamlining what’s already an elegant and brilliantly paced tragedy like Macbeth into an hour and 45 minutes sans intermission is to sabotage what makes Shakespeare great.

 

Doyle’s other conceit is to have a cast of nine play all the parts, so the weird sisters become a disembodied—and eerily effective—chorus. But having such a small cast on a bare wooden set lays bare Doyle’s deficient adaptation, especially when Corey Stoll’s stolid Macbeth takes center stage.

 

Stoll is also outacted by his wife, Nadia Bowers, as Lady Macbeth. Admittedly, hers is the juicier part, but she gets real mileage out of it: her sleepwalking scene, brief though it is, is the most resonant in the play. But since Doyle’s Macbeth flies by so quickly there’s no chance of following the tragic arc which Shakespeare so marvelously develops, leaving a sense of glimpsing mere highlights, like Cliff’s Notes for audiences that haven’t seen the whole play.    

 

Richard III

Gerald W. Lynch Theater at John Jay College, 524 West 59th Street, NY, NY

lincolncenter.org/white-light-festival

 

 

Macbeth

Classic Stage Company, 136 East 13th Street, New York, NY

classicstage.org

Off-Broadway Play Review—Theresa Rebeck’s “Seared” with Raúl Esparza

Seared

Written by Theresa Rebeck; directed by Moritz von Steulpnagel

Performances through December 15, 2019

 

Raúl Esparza and Krysta Rodriguez in Seared (photo: Joan Marcus)

 

It’s not surprising that behind the scenes of a Brooklyn restaurant would make for a rollicking good time, and Theresa Rebeck’s Seared is a fast-paced, often blisteringly funny study of the clashing personalities involved in the act of making food.

 

The action revolves around Harry, a self-centered chef (of course) who decides not to have his signature scallops dish on the menu after a rave review in New York magazine. His refusal to use his artistry for mere commerce causes endless headaches for his partner, Mike, who’s constantly pulling his hair out while running the place, along with go-getting waiter Rodney.

 

Harry’s genius at creating delicious dishes is such that, even with his stubbornness, Mike sticks by him and his idiosyncratic behavior. But Mike also hedges his bets by bringing in Emily, a whipsmart consultant who soon whips the place into shape, bringing in more tables and getting a famous food critic to visit and sample the food.

 

That last causes a final butting of heads that threatens to tear apart Harry and Mike’s tenuous business relationship, and if Rebeck’s solution to this quandary is dramatically ridiculous (if comically inevitable), her tart dialogue provides enough oil to power her predictable but slick machine. 

 

Director Moritz von Steulpnagel inventively marshals his forces on Tim Mackabee’s minutely-detailed kitchen set, starting with W. Tre Davis’ amusingly ambitious Rodney and David Mason’s highly (and entertainingly) exasperated Mike. The always appealing Krysta Rodriguez makes Emily a funny and intelligent foil for Harry.

 

At the center of it all is Raúl Esparza, whose brilliantly controlled comic performance as Harry includes his dexterous creating of the dazzling dishes that are the chef’s métier. The second-act opener, when Harry painstakingly and wordlessly prepares a salmon dish only to reject it as not up to his standards with a nonchalant scoop into the garbage can is as perfectly executed an onstage moment as I’ve seen in quite awhile.

 

Seared

Robert W. Wilson MCC Theater Space, 511 West 52nd Street, New York, NY

mcctheater.com

Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra Offers Aural Delights

Diana Damrau with the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra, Photo Chris Lee
 
A thus-far strong season at Carnegie Hall continued brilliantly with two outstanding concerts—on the evenings of Friday, November 8th and Saturday, November 10th—given by the superb musicians of the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra.
 
The first program, under the sterling direction of the esteemed Mariss Jansons, opened delightfully with a wonderful account of Richard Strauss’s exhilarating Four Symphonic Interludes from Intermezzo, featuring a charming “Travel Fever and Waltz Scene,” a lyrical “Dreaming by the Fireside,” a witty “At the Card-Table,” and an exuberant “Happy Ending.” The same composer’s magnificent Four Last Songs were then exquisitely interpreted by the extraordinary Diana Damrau, who looked especially glamorous. She gave a passionate rendition of “Spring,” followed by the more introspective “September,” the more somber “Going to Sleep,” and the autumnal “At Sunset.”
 
The second half of the evening was also marvelous, a terrific realization of Johannes Brahms’s magisterial Symphony No. 4, which began with a Mendelssohnian reading of the first movement followed by an enchanting Andante. The dance-like scherzo was succeeded by a dramatic finale. Ardent applause ensued in an entrancing encore: the same composer’s exceptionally famous and thrilling Hungarian Dance No. 5.
 
The second program was also excellent, eloquently conducted by the young Vasily Petrenko, replacing an ill Jansons. The evening opened pleasurably with a fine version Carl Maria von Weber’s ultimately joyous Overture to Euryanthe.
 
Renowned soloist Rudolf Buchbinder then took the stage for a lovely account of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s ineffable Piano Concerto No. 23, beginning with a sparkling, if subdued, reading of the first movement, followed by a haunting Adagio and a vivacious finale. An appreciative reception elicited a splendid encore: Alfred Grünfeld’s Soirée de Vienne, Op. 56, Concert Paraphrase on Waltzes from Die Fledermaus (after Johann Strauss II).
 
The concert closed most memorably with a masterful performance of Dmitri Shostakovich’s highly original Symphony No. 10. The opening movement was solemn and powerful, while the scherzo was breathless and dazzling. The Allegretto was mysterious and suspenseful while the ingenious concluding movement was rendered arrestingly. An enthusiastic ovation drew forth another gratifying encore, the same composer’s Entr’acte (Allegretto) between Scenes 6 and 7 from Act III of Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk.
 
I look forward to the next local appearance of these superior artists.

The Munich Philharmonic Plays Tchaikovsky & Beethoven at Carnegie Hall

Behzod Abduraimov with the Munich Philharmonic, photo © 2019 Chris Lee.
 
A promising new season at Carnegie Hall continued with two excellent concerts on the evenings of Friday and Saturday, October 25th and 26th, given by the superb musicians of the Munich Philharmonic under the sterling direction of Valery Gergiev.
 
The first program opened excitingly with a confident account of Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky’s perennially popular Piano Concerto No. 1, featuring the celebrated soloist, Behzod Abduraimov. The galvanic first movement was intensely Romantic while more lyrical, except during the more dynamic passages, was the ensuing, often Mozartean Andantino. The rousing finale was enthralling and earned a rapturous ovation which was reciprocated by an impressive encore: the Tchaikovsky Lullaby, Op. 16, No. 1, arranged by Sergei Rachmaninoff.
 
The second half of the evening was devoted to an admirably controlled performance—possibly the finest that I’ve heard in a concert hall—of Anton Bruckner’s magnificent Symphony No. 7. The musicians sustained the requisite gravitas of the opening movement, which they brought to a thrilling conclusion. Even more exalted was the elegiac Adagio which again climaxed majestically. The outer sections of the Scherzo were more propulsive, beautifully contrasting with the more subdued Trio. Most dramatic of all was the extraordinary Finale, which again moved the audience to ardent applause.
 
The second program was also outstanding, beginning enjoyably with contemporary composer Jörg Widmann’s Con brio, an arresting homage to Ludwig von Beethoven, with quotations from his Seventh and Eighth symphonies. The esteemed virtuoso Leonidas Kavakos then took the stage for a superior version of the Violin Concerto of Johannes Brahms. In the opening movement, the artists adeptly oscillated between the tragic and the affirmative, while the following Adagio was song-like but not without agitation, with the robust finale most ebullient of all. An enthusiastic reception again elicited a compelling encore: Georges Enescu’s "Ménétrier" (Minstrel) from Impressions d’enfance, Op. 28, No. 1.
 
The remainder of the concert consisted in a stunning rendition of Dmitri Shostakovich’s brilliant Symphony No. 5. The initial movement was somber yet spirited with the second the most playful. The introspective Largo was succeeded by the exultant Finale, earning the musicians more avid applause. The return of this ensemble to this stage will be highly anticipated.

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