Archives for: January 2009, 09
ATW News Digest - Pre-Broadway Engagement of West Side Story faces critics - read the reviews
By Andy Propst on Jan 9, 2009 | In ATW Digest
Washington Post
'West Side Story' at the National Theatre
This 'West Side Story' Is Fluent In the Language of the Heart
Baltimore Sun
Revved-up 'West Side Story' gets a trial run in Washington
The Broadway-bound revival of West Side Story that opened last night in Washington has dirt on its shins and blood under its fingernails.
Variety
Review: West Side Story
...a sincere and energetic production that still dazzles with Jerome Robbins' riveting choreography and the landmark Bernstein-Sondheim score. It could be the perfect tonic for Broadway's economic blues.
Potomac Stages
Review: West Side Story
ATW Digest - Gionfriddo's Becky Shaw opens off-Broadway - read the reviews
By Andy Propst on Jan 9, 2009 | In ATW Digest
AmericanTheaterWeb
Review - Becky Shaw - A Dark Modern Comedy of Manners
New York Times
First-Date Dyspepsia and Marriage Queasiness
Gina Gionfriddo’s corker of a new play, “Becky Shaw,” is as engrossing as it is ferociously funny.
New York Daily News
'Becky Shaw' is 'slick, stylish,' but a bit too clever
A social study of haves and have-nots and the blurry line between the two, "Becky Shaw" is slick and stylish and flecked with pungent moments, but it buckles under too much clever dialogue.
amNY New York City Theater
Theater Review of Becky Shaw
It takes a while to see where exactly playwright Gina Gionfriddo is going in her slow-paced, verbose, yet intriguing black comedy “Becky Shaw,” which just opened at Off-Broadway’s Second Stage after a successful run at Kentucky’s Humana Festival.
New York Post
Sharp wit part of setup
Anyone planning to play matchmaker should first see "Becky Shaw." Gina Gionfriddo's scath ing, class-conscious comedy is a...
Bergen Record
Praised comedy opens off-Broadway "Becky Shaw"
Associated Press
Gionfriddo's 'Becky Shaw' Is a Sharp Social Comedy
''Becky Shaw,'' which opened Thursday at off-Broadway's Second Stage, is a sharp social comedy of articulate anger laced with large helpings of angst and ambition. The perfect nourishment for theatergoers starved for a dramatic conflagration or two.
Bloomberg.com
Tantalizing `Becky Shaw' Delivers Freakish Folks, Pithy Humor: John Simon
The plot of Gina Gionfriddo’s “Becky Shaw” is inconsequential and the characters are mundane, but the talk is a blue streak verging on purple. Presented by New York’s Second Stage, it is a comedy that subsists on its sweaty dialogue alone.
Financial Times
Becky Shaw, Second Stage, New York
Too often this play descends into soap-opera situations, writes Brendan Lemon
Variety
Review: Becky Shaw
...any charge of superficiality hardly counts as criticism, when character surfaces are so artfully defined by the savvy cast of Peter DuBois' slick production for Second Stage.
Back Stage
Becky Shaw reviewed by David Sheward
It seems as though all the hot action in Becky Shaw takes place offstage. A daughter has a nasty confrontation with her mother's new lover in a hotel lobby. Newlyweds have their first serious fight.
TheaterMania
Review: Bekcy Shaw
Gina Gionfriddo's cynical play about modern romance is as bogus as a Ponzi scheme.
Talkin' Broadway
Review: Becky Shaw
Economic problem drama, vibrant comic soap opera, or both? Who knows and who cares? For the majority of Becky Shaw, Gina Gionfriddo's deliciously unclassifiable new play at Second Stage, it hardly matters whether you're immersed in a hard-boiled domestic page-turner or an acid-toned satire of values and finances gone impossibly awry. All that's relevant is the insinuating energy of the title character, the helpless people in her orbit who are being wrenched apart by her gravitational pull, and the delirious plot twists and barbed-wire dialogue that unite them all in an addictive theatrical frenzy. . . .
CurtainUp
Review: Becky Shaw
ATW Review - Becky Shaw - A Dark Modern Comedy of Manners
By Andy Propst on Jan 9, 2009 | In ATW Reviews
A hearty laugh is never far away in Gina Gionfriddo's Becky Shaw, a dark modern comedy of manners that opened last night at Second Stage Theatre.
Gionfriddo's title character doesn't appear until late in the first act. Until she does, we met a marvelously eccentric group of characters, including the steely and passive aggressive Susan (Kelly Bishop), who's recently widowed, fighting MS and dating her much younger house painter. Susan's ability to so rapidly move on with her life appalls her psychology graduate student daughter Suzanna (made somehow neurotically enchanting by Emily Bergl), who after four months still grieves her father's death and battles almost clinical depression over it. When things get really bad for Suzanna, she turns to Max (David Wilson Barnes), who was raised essentially as her adopted brother and who now acts as the family's financial consultant.
Max's ability to clinically focus on everything but emotions has made him a success as a businessman, but it means he's ill-prepared to deal with Suzanna's needs. He believes that if she simply finds something to do, she'll be able to pull herself together. She takes his advice and goes on a ski vacation where she meets Andrew (Thomas Sadoski in a warmly kooky turn), Max's antithesis, a touchy-feely writer, whom Suzanna almost instantly marries. It's through Andrew that the soft-spoken and desperately needy Becky (a perfectly calibrated turn from Annie Parisse) enters the scene. She's working as a temp at Andrew's day job, and misguidedly, Andrew and Suzanna decide that she would make a perfect blind date for Max. As if the mismatch of the two were not enough of a recipe for disaster, their first evening together is interrupted by a robbery, which sends Becky and, in turn, all of those around her, reeling.
Gionfriddo's comedy crackles with deliciously funny epigrams – many of which spring from Susan, a sort of 21st century Lady Bracknell who's having to deal with the fact that her husband has left her in dire financial straits. Bishop delivers each choice line with precision and dry aplomb. Max gets an equal number of choice zingers and, like Bishop, Barnes' delivery is pitch-perfect.
These two characters' almost icy view of the world and relationships contrasts beautifully, and often hilariously, with they way in which the other characters approach life. Interestingly though, even as audiences laugh, they feel for these characters and also find themselves swept up in the mystery of why Becky behaves the way she does. Are her actions – which begin with just incessant calls to Max following their disastrous date – motivated out of neediness or is she some sort of psychopath? Perhaps most important, the way the others treat Becky (and there are surprises to be found here and elsewhere) and one another make theatergoers consider the nature of empathy, kindness and love.
Director Peter DuBois' staging of unfolds with a grand fluidity thanks to the sliding panels and units from scenic designer Derek McLane which, lit with care by David Weiner, take theatergoers from New York to Providence and ultimately to Susan's opulent home in Virginia. DuBois' work, with its exceptional attention to detail, does not, however, completely mitigate some of Gionfriddo's over-plotting and writing in the second act, but it's of little matter. After a brief lull, the production rights itself marvelously, and theatergoers leave satisfied with a lot to discuss: not only what Becky's true nature may or may not be, but also which of Gionfriddo's one-liners was funniest.
---- Andy Propst
Becky Shaw plays at Second Stage Theatre (307 West 43rd Street). Performances are Tuesday at 7pm; Wednesday at 2 and 8pm; Thurs. & Fri. at 8pm; Saturday at 2 and 8pm; and Sunday at 3pm. Tickets are $70.00 and can be purchased by calling 212-246-4422 or by visiting www.2st.com.