In today’s Wall Street Journal drama column I review three shows, Burn This, All’s Well That Ends Well, and Bach in Leipzig, currently being performed at Shakespeare Santa Cruz, plus an off-Broadway show, the Irish Repertory Theatre’s production of Around the World in 80 Days. I liked them all. Here’s an excerpt.
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Outdoor theater festivals are like picnics–the food tastes better when eaten al fresco, but sometimes it rains. Shakespeare Santa Cruz, founded in 1981, splits the difference by performing in two different theaters, one outside and the other inside, both of them deep within the woodsy campus of the University of California, Santa Cruz. Each summer the company presents two Shakespeare plays in a natural amphitheatre located in a redwood grove and two modern plays in a nearby 527-seat indoor theater equipped with stadium seating and a thrust stage. I’ve been hearing exciting things about the festival, so I flew out to California last weekend and caught three shows there, all of which were worthy of their sylvan setting.
Lanford Wilson’s “Burn This,” to be sure, no longer looks quite so fresh as it did in the long-ago days when the wisecracking gay second-banana character had yet to become a cliché. Twenty-one years after it transferred to Broadway, “Burn This” can now be seen for what it is, a sentimental variation on “A Streetcar Named Desire” in which the crazy girl is a workaholic choreographer who lives in a converted loft and longs to get a life, the tough-guy stud is a closet aesthete and everybody lives happily ever after. No wonder it ran for 437 performances!
On the other hand, Mr. Wilson is a playwright of quality, and if “Burn This” has a core of mush, it’s also well made, well written, very funny when it wants to be and an effective vehicle for four interesting actors and a director who knows how to shift them into overdrive. Shakespeare Santa Cruz delivers the goods…
If you long for theatrical froth whipped up with insolent panache, you’ll have a hard time finding a more satisfying show than the Irish Repertory Theatre’s production of “Around the World in 80 Days,” Mark Brown’s stage version of Jules Verne’s 1873 novel about a stiff-upper-lipped Londoner who uproots himself from the Reform Club to go charging around the globe. Co-produced with Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park, the company that brought you John Doyle’s miniaturized revival of “Company,” “Around the World in 80 Days” is performed on a very, very small stage on which Phileas Fogg (Daniel Stewart) and his trusty servant Passepartout (Evan Zes) circumnavigate the world via steamship, express train and chartered elephant. The cast consists of five actors and two “Foley artists” who supply sound effects and incidental music in full view of the audience….
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Read the whole thing here.
Archives for August 15, 2008
TT: Sousa the storyteller
Regular readers of this blog may recall that I ran into the tuba-playing son of a member of the Sousa Band on one of my recent theater-related journeys. He loaned me a copy of Marching Along, John Philip Sousa’s long-out-of-print 1928 autobiography, which I read and found (somewhat to my surprise) to be utterly fascinating.
I resolved at once to write a “Sightings” column about Sousa and his memoirs, and the fruits of that resolution will be published in tomorrow’s Wall Street Journal. It turns out that Sousa, who also wrote three full-length novels and 138 newspaper and magazine articles, was as vigorous and engaging a prose stylist as he was a composer, and Marching Along offers a vivid glimpse of his offstage personality.
To find out more about Sousa and Marching Along, pick up a copy of Saturday’s Journal and see what I have to say.
UPDATE: Read the whole thing here.
TT: Almanac
“The web of our life is of a mingled yarn, good and ill together; our virtues would be proud if our faults whipped them not, and our crimes would despair if they were not cherished by our virtues.”
William Shakespeare, All’s Well That Ends Well