And all of us theater lovers can celebrate with the terrific new app that spotlights 50 landmark NT productions with photos, cast lists, set and costume design sketches and even images of prompt scripts. You can find it all by clicking here.
Tuesday, October 22, 2013
Happy 50th Birthday...
...to London's National Theatre!
And all of us theater lovers can celebrate with the terrific new app that spotlights 50 landmark NT productions with photos, cast lists, set and costume design sketches and even images of prompt scripts. You can find it all by clicking here.
And all of us theater lovers can celebrate with the terrific new app that spotlights 50 landmark NT productions with photos, cast lists, set and costume design sketches and even images of prompt scripts. You can find it all by clicking here.
Thursday, October 3, 2013
Want to Know How Tough It Is To Be A Working Playwright Today?
Page 73 Productions, an off-Broadway company that specializes in works by early-career playwrights has just announced the 26 semi-finalists for its annual fellowship. The eventual winner will get $10,000 for him or herself and an additional $10,000 in development support for the play. The runner-up prizes are the chance to participate in either Page 73's writers' workshop or its summer residency program, which includes "a week of writing or workshop time at Yale University." But here's what really got me: 400 people applied.
Thursday, August 15, 2013
Second Thoughts on My Summer Festival Fatigue
I’ve been feeling badly all week about the grumpiness of Saturday's main B&Me post on summer theater festivals, particularly that line where I said " there are too many people doing theater in
New York and many of them should be doing something else."
I still think the shows I saw were weak but I do recognize the value of
the festivals. There are some truly talented
artists who participate in them and the festivals provide a place for those theatermakers to
hone their craft and for theater lovers to discover them.
That case has been
well made in a few pieces I’ve read, including this one and this one. Plus, you can find reviews of all the this year's Fringe
shows here.
Friday, July 26, 2013
Getting Ready for National Dance Day
Tomorrow, July 27, is National Dance Day, a fun fitness event started and
promoted by Nigel Lythgoe, the producer of TV's "So You Think You Can Dance." He and his team have
put together two routines for people to learn. Click here for
more info. And then, get out there and
shake your booty.
Monday, July 1, 2013
What are the Greatest Plays of the Past 100 Years?
It’s always great when theater gets to play with the pop
culture big boys and so I was delighted to see that Entertainment Weekly's current issue on “The 100 All-Time Greatest” cultural events has ranked not only movies, TV shows, record albums and books, but plays too.
But I'm not totally surprised they did it because my old friend Jess Cagle edits the magazine and he
was a one-time theater reporter himself. Jess and his staff at EW anointed 50 plays the
greatest of the past 100 years. And it’s
hard to complain about their top 10:
1. Death of A Salesman
2. A Streetcar Named Desire
3. Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?
4. Long Day’s Journey into Night
5. Fences
6. Angels in America
7. Waiting for Godot
8. Pygmalion
9. A Raisin in the Sun
10. Our Town
And the other 40 make sense too; among them are: Glengarry Glen
Ross, August: Osage County, True West, Look Back in Anger, Master Harold and the
Boys, The Homecoming, Ruined, Top Girls, M. Butterfly, Topdog/Underdog, The Orphan’s
Home Cycle and Uncommon Women and Others.
Still, lists are designed in part to get us
arguing and what kind of theater lover wouldn’t have at least one
gripe? Here’s mine: how could they have
left off Paula Vogel’s remarkable How I Learned to Drive?
Now what’s yours?
Tuesday, June 25, 2013
Happy Birthday to TKTS, Which Turns 40 Today
Is there any theater lover who doesn’t love TKTS? Or who
hasn’t at some time in their life bought one of its reduced-priced tickets to
see a show?
The Theatre Development Fund, which operates the ticket booth that sells
same-day seats to theater and dance performances both on and off-Broadway,
estimates that TKTS has sold 58.5 million tickets since it first opened its
windows on June 25, 1973.
Plus, over the past five years, its Red Stairs have served
as an anchor point and meeting place for the entire Theater District.
Now, to celebrate its 40th anniversary, TKTS is throwing a
party that starts at 11 a.m. tomorrow, June 26, at its iconic booth on Broadway
and 47th Street.
Leading the festivities will be Harvey Fierstein, Gerard Alessandrini who has created a special Forbidden
Broadway-style tribute; and Julie Halston who is scheduled host a karaoke
featuring Broadway songs from the past 40 years and to interview people on the
ticket line.
But if you can’t make it, you can still join in the
celebration by watching this video feature by local CBS News anchor Dana Tyler,
which you can see by clicking here.
Friday, June 14, 2013
Helen Mirren Reigns Again as the Queen in “The Audience”
God Save NT Live! My
high school classmate Lesley and I went last night to see the simulcast of
London’s National Theatre production of The Audience in which Helen Mirren
reprises her role as Queen Elizabeth II.
Only this time, instead of just imagining her meetings with Tony Blair
as he did in the movie “The Queen,” playwright Peter Morgan has invented a collection of the monarch's weekly briefings with the 11 other prime ministers who have served over the six decades
since Elizabeth took the throne in 1952.
I was so eager to see this show that I seriously considered making a trip to London this spring but, luckily for me and my budget, I heard that the National was going to simulcast the show as part of its NT Live series, which screens simulcasts of select London productions to movie theaters in cities around the world.
So I immediately bought tickets to see the presentation of The Audience at New York University’s Skirball Center. And so did a whole bunch of other theater lovers. I ran into my friend Ann, who grew up in London; and my theatergoing buddy Bill and his friend Ronnie. I also spotted the Broadway producer Elizabeth McCann, who, although walking slowly and with a cane, had made her way downtown too.
I don’t yet know what the others thought but Lesley and I had a great time, even though we clearly knew less about the prime ministers than the on-screen audience at the Gielgud Theatre, who roared at lines, mannerisms and intonations which must have deftly identified each of their former leaders.
But director Stephen Daldry has put together a characteristically smart production, the performances are all crackerjack, Mirren has expanded her empathy for the queen (click here to read an interviewwith the actress) and a brief interview right before the meatier second act between Morgan and British journalist Emma Freud added some great perspective.
It all adds up to an affectionate—and entertaining—tribute to the flesh-and-blood woman behind the royal image. My only complaint is that the cameras failed to show us Mirren’s onstage costume and wig changes, which reviews said played such a delightful part in the show.
The production plays its final performance this weekend and although there are rumors that it might come to New York, nothing has yet been announced. But encores of the simulcast have already been scheduled and you can find out where and when they’re happening by clicking here.
I was so eager to see this show that I seriously considered making a trip to London this spring but, luckily for me and my budget, I heard that the National was going to simulcast the show as part of its NT Live series, which screens simulcasts of select London productions to movie theaters in cities around the world.
So I immediately bought tickets to see the presentation of The Audience at New York University’s Skirball Center. And so did a whole bunch of other theater lovers. I ran into my friend Ann, who grew up in London; and my theatergoing buddy Bill and his friend Ronnie. I also spotted the Broadway producer Elizabeth McCann, who, although walking slowly and with a cane, had made her way downtown too.
I don’t yet know what the others thought but Lesley and I had a great time, even though we clearly knew less about the prime ministers than the on-screen audience at the Gielgud Theatre, who roared at lines, mannerisms and intonations which must have deftly identified each of their former leaders.
But director Stephen Daldry has put together a characteristically smart production, the performances are all crackerjack, Mirren has expanded her empathy for the queen (click here to read an interviewwith the actress) and a brief interview right before the meatier second act between Morgan and British journalist Emma Freud added some great perspective.
It all adds up to an affectionate—and entertaining—tribute to the flesh-and-blood woman behind the royal image. My only complaint is that the cameras failed to show us Mirren’s onstage costume and wig changes, which reviews said played such a delightful part in the show.
The production plays its final performance this weekend and although there are rumors that it might come to New York, nothing has yet been announced. But encores of the simulcast have already been scheduled and you can find out where and when they’re happening by clicking here.
Thursday, June 13, 2013
SpringboardNYC Offers Young Actors a Helping Hand as They Take the Scary Plunge Into Show Business
To paraphrase Sondheim, each spring, another thousand people
get off the train and look around at another thousand people who just off the
plane, who have all come to work as actors, singers and dancers in New
York. And no matter how talented they are, it can be scary as hell.
The luckiest of them are the participants
in SpringboardNYC, the American Theatre Wing’s college-to-career
transition program that gives 36 stars-of-tomorrow all kinds of practical
advice about how to get started in show business.
For two weeks each June, the Springboarders
participate in audition workshops, attend Broadway and off-Broadway shows, get
advice from top agents, managers and casting directors and take master classes
with award-winning directors and performers. This year’s roster of guest speakers included directors Jack O’Brien and
Diane Paulus (fresh from her Tony win for Pippin) and actors Alan Cumming, Laura Osnes and Tom Hanks.
I'm lucky enough to be on the Wing's Advisory Committee and so I got the chance to sit-in on one of
this week’s sessions in which former program participants (all still in their 20s) shared their
experiences about their first years in the business with the newcomers. And it
was so inspiring that I left totally envying the participants. If you’re currently
a theater student (or know one) and want to know more about the Springboard program, click
here.
Tuesday, June 11, 2013
Broadway & Me on NPR!
Forgive me for tooting my own horn but as a theater lover and a longtime NPR fan, I'm delighted to have been interviewed for the report that ran this morning on whether theater audiences have become ruder. Click here to listen to what I (and others) told reporter Margot Adler about the growing number of talkers, Tweeters and food eaters who are filling theater seats.
Friday, June 7, 2013
Shakespeare Will Go Old School This Fall With Some Must-See Single-Sex Productions
All the parts were played by men in the Bard’s day and they
will be again this fall when the great Mark Rylance leads an all-male company
that will offer Richard III and Twelfth Night in repertory on Broadway. Rylance, a two-time Tony winner who was
also the founding artistic director of Shakespeare’s Globe, will play the hunchback
king in the tragedy and the lovesick noblewoman Olivia in the comedy. Meanwhile,
over at St. Ann’s Warehouse in Brooklyn, the also-great Harriet Walter will do
a different kind of gender-bending: she’ll play Brutus in an all-female
production of Julius Caesar that won much acclaim during a run last year at
London’s Donmar Warehouse.
Tuesday, June 4, 2013
The Best Theater Interview of the Week
Yes, I know it's only Tuesday. But even though the pre-Tony interviews are tumbling out faster than you can say Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike, it's going to be tough to beat the totally charming Q&A between Shalita Grant, who has been nominated for her role as the psychic housemaid Cassandra in Christopher Durang's contemporary homage to Chekhov, and my blogger pal Lucky at the Craptacular. Click here to read and enjoy it.
Friday, May 24, 2013
The Bare Truth About Actors Baring It All...
is that there were so many shows over the past season that had actors getting into and out of bath tubs on Broadway (Breakfast at Tiffany's, Macbeth, The Nance, The Testament of Mary) and off-Broadway (If There Is I Haven't Found It Yet, Water by the Spoonful) that nude (or nearly so) scenes are now cliché (OCC president Simon Saltzman even joked about them at yesterday's awards ceremony) and so directors looking to be daring are going to have to start looking elsewhere.
And it isn't just here. An article in Britain's "The Stage" says that actors over there are so concerned about growing requests to do nude scenes that they've taken the issue to Equity. Click here to read more about that.
And it isn't just here. An article in Britain's "The Stage" says that actors over there are so concerned about growing requests to do nude scenes that they've taken the issue to Equity. Click here to read more about that.
A Great Time at Yesterday's Outer Critics Circle Awards
The unofficial winner for best speech goes to the congenitally amusing Nathan Lane, who also took home the official honor for Outstanding Actor in a Play for his performance in The Nance.
Broadway & Me Now Has a New Way to Have Its Say
Brief thoughts, observations and sometimes news too will pop up here but my main posts will still appear on Wednesdays and Saturdays at Broadway & Me.
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