Kimberly Akimbo (c) Joan Marcus
"New York is my Personal Property and I'm gonna split it with you." I review mostly movies and New York theater shows. I am also an awards prognosticator. And a playwright.
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Thursday, May 25, 2023
Monday, May 15, 2023
Theater Review: Two “Romeo and Juliet”s, Both Alike in Dignity, Imagination and a Love of Pop Music (Be It The Backstreet Boys or Prince) Are Worth Catching
Romeo and Juliet (c) Julieta Cervantes
Theater: Romeo and Juliet
NAATCO (in partnership with Two River Theater)
On the heels of winning the Lortel Award for writing and directing the imaginative Wolf Play last season, Hansol Jung and Dustin Wills, respectively, have set a goal to reimagine Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet, which has been saturating the market in revisions recently including Steven Spielberg’s Oscar-winning West Side Story remake, as well as other musical adaptation like Romeo and Bernadette (exorcising Juliet) and & Juliet (canceling out Romeo). So, it’s kind of nice to actually just watch Bill’s original with both leads intact, even if Jung has supplemented the original verse with some modern lingo, like cougars, ghosting and the music of Prince. Like Wolf Play, the staging and set (by Junghyun Georgia Lee) at first feels very cluttered and chaotic, but everything comes together by the end and utilized in some way or another. The very talented and exhaustive Asian-American cast of nine, switch roles nimbly and run up and around the stage with ease, including two openings in the middle of the playing area that could possibly be a wrong turn drop. Major Curda plays Romeo as a more sensitive soul with a guitar, annoying his friends, a very energetic – and maybe slightly in love with Romeo – Mercutio (Jose Gamo) and levelheaded Benvolio (Zion Jang), to no end. Still mooning over the unseen Rosaline (who herself is the hero of her own movie on Hulu), Romeo is soon smitten with the young (notice her footwear) Juliet (the headstrong Dorcas Leung), who may not be thinking of an arranged marriage, but also falls for the swoony Romeo, with the help of her ever-trusting Nurse (Mia Katigbak).
Thursday, May 11, 2023
Theater Reviews: Musicals About Young People in the Big City ("New York, New York" on Broadway and "Oliver!" at Encore!) in Productions With Determination and Spunk
New York, New York (c) Paul Kolnik
Theater: New York, New York
On Broadway at the St. James Theatre
It’s been many years since I’ve seen the 1977 film New York, New York, but I always remembered it certainly wasn’t a feel-good experience, considering it was from director Martin Scorsese and includes artists from the hardly happy Cabaret (actor Liza Minelli and songwriters John Kander and Fred Ebb). So, it’s not surprising that book writers David Thompson and Sharon Washington and director and choreographer Susan Stroman have only kept the bare bones structure of the film, opting for a more Ragtime kaleidoscope narrative of many aspiring musicians trying to be successful in the titled city, post WWII. Like the film, most of the musical’s focus is on Jimmy (Colton Ryan), a jack-of-all-trades musician whose hot-headedness keeps him from keeping the gigs he gets, and Francine (Anna Uzele), a fresh-off-the-bus singer with a dream. They meet at an audition, and from there Jimmy makes it his mission to make Francine, who is African American, a star. But this central love story is now populated with other musicians from their orbit, including an African American trumpet player (John Clay III) who encounters his fair share of racist club owners; a Cuban drummer (Angel Sigala) who wants to introduce Latin music to the city’s musical landscape; and a Polish immigrant (Oliver Prose) who has dreams of playing violin at Carnegie Hall. If anyone can keep all these stories afloat, it’s Stroman. She fills the St. James stage with life, bustling with action and vibrancy, a love letter to the city that never sleeps, going from one NYC landmark (like Central Park) to another (like the Brooklyn Bridge) with breakneck speed and clarity. Her most breathtaking moment (for a rather superfluous number) includes the setting sun-through-the-skyscraper phenomenon known as Manhattanhenge before there was ever such a term. It is simply magical.
Tuesday, May 9, 2023
Theater: Recipients Announced For The Lortel Awards, Theatre World Awards, NYC Drama Critics Circle Awards and The Pulitzer Prize in Drama 2023
Wolf Play (c) Julieta Cervantes