Blog posts and @kendertheater Twitter feed on theater in NYC & beyond, plus current Movie, TV & Book recommendations
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Monday, March 25, 2013
Off Broadway Gems Shine In LA
Two of last year's best off-Broadway plays have made their way to Los Angeles and have lost little of their considerable impact in their move westward. Indeed, both are highly recommended current LA area theater offerings if you like your theater probing and unafraid to tackle darker hues.
The David Cromer directed "TRIBES" at the Mark Taper Forum features many of the same cast members as the New York off Broadway production. The play focuses upon a highly dysfunctional British family whose seemingly most functional member is a son who was deaf from birth. That son enters into a romatic relationship with a woman who is hearing but going deaf, and was raised by deaf parents. The play raises a host of weighty themes and issues and features a terrific cast and the same expert direction as its NY predecessor. As much as I enjoyed this show at the cozy Barrow Street Theater in New York, I liked the Taper production even more, as the more elaborate set at the Taper meshed well with the play's inherent rhythms.
"TRIBES" is certain to be one of the best plays and productions Los Angeles will see this year, and I encourage you to see it before it closes on April 14.
The other recent outstanding off Broadway play that I just revisited is the entirely new production of Samuel D. Hunter's "THE WHALE" at South Coast Rep. The play features a grossly overweight man who is essentially eating himself to death. The play repeatedly subverts expectations and challenges common assumptions, in ways that are moving and illuminating. The play demands an incredible commitment and emotional investment by the actor playing Charlie, the larger than life lead character. If Matthew Arkin does not quite reach the heights of Shuler Hensley's performance at NY's Playwrights Horizons, he brings a softer, gentler take to the role that is highly effective.
"THE WHALE" may not be for everyone (the Orange Country matron sitting next to me in the theater exclaimed out loud mid-performance that this was the worst play she has ever seen), but for theatergoers who like layered and challenging works that do not shy away from the darker elements of the human condition, this play is likely a good one for you.
Two well produced, nuanced and engaging plays in major regional theaters that are simultaneously playing in the LA area and are highly recommended. How refreshing. I hope it is a trend.
The David Cromer directed "TRIBES" at the Mark Taper Forum features many of the same cast members as the New York off Broadway production. The play focuses upon a highly dysfunctional British family whose seemingly most functional member is a son who was deaf from birth. That son enters into a romatic relationship with a woman who is hearing but going deaf, and was raised by deaf parents. The play raises a host of weighty themes and issues and features a terrific cast and the same expert direction as its NY predecessor. As much as I enjoyed this show at the cozy Barrow Street Theater in New York, I liked the Taper production even more, as the more elaborate set at the Taper meshed well with the play's inherent rhythms.
"TRIBES" is certain to be one of the best plays and productions Los Angeles will see this year, and I encourage you to see it before it closes on April 14.
The other recent outstanding off Broadway play that I just revisited is the entirely new production of Samuel D. Hunter's "THE WHALE" at South Coast Rep. The play features a grossly overweight man who is essentially eating himself to death. The play repeatedly subverts expectations and challenges common assumptions, in ways that are moving and illuminating. The play demands an incredible commitment and emotional investment by the actor playing Charlie, the larger than life lead character. If Matthew Arkin does not quite reach the heights of Shuler Hensley's performance at NY's Playwrights Horizons, he brings a softer, gentler take to the role that is highly effective.
"THE WHALE" may not be for everyone (the Orange Country matron sitting next to me in the theater exclaimed out loud mid-performance that this was the worst play she has ever seen), but for theatergoers who like layered and challenging works that do not shy away from the darker elements of the human condition, this play is likely a good one for you.
Two well produced, nuanced and engaging plays in major regional theaters that are simultaneously playing in the LA area and are highly recommended. How refreshing. I hope it is a trend.
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