Tag Archives: Daniel Sullivan

ORPHANS

ORPHANS (photo by Joan Marcus)

Phillip (Tom Sturridge), Treat (Ben Foster), and Harold (Alec Baldwin) form a rather unique pseudo-family in ORPHANS (photo by Joan Marcus)

Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre
236 West 45th St. between Broadway & Eighth Aves.
Tuesday – Sunday through May 19, $67-$132
www.orphansonbroadway.com

When petty thief Treat (Ben Foster) lures home businessman Harold (Alec Baldwin), he gets more than he bargained for in the energetic Broadway debut of Lyle Kessler’s 1983 play, Orphans. Treat has turned to a life of crime in order to take care of himself and his developmentally disabled younger brother, Phillip (Tom Sturridge), in their run-down house in North Philadelphia. Treat, who takes pleasure in wielding a knife, ties the passed-out Harold to a chair and tells Phillip to watch him while the older brother goes out to try to collect a ransom for his kidnap victim. Phillip, who has a thing for mayonnaise, canned tuna, and a woman’s red shoe, can’t leave the house because of allergies that could potentially kill him. But inside he’s like a playful caged animal, leaping across John Lee Beatty’s set like a feral cat, from stairs to couch to windowsill and back again. Meanwhile, when he comes to, Phillip is nonplussed at having been captured, speaking eloquently about admiring the Dead End Kids and remembering his difficult childhood as an orphan, just like Treat and Phillip. Soon he’s serving as a surrogate father figure, at first enraging Treat while intriguing Phillip, leading to a surprise shift in the power dynamic.

Orphans is a showcase for the trio of actors; the original L.A. production thirty years ago starred Joe Pantoliano, Lane Smith, and Paul Leiber, while the 1985 Steppenwolf version boasted Gary Sinise directing John Mahoney, Terry Kinney, and Kevin Anderson, and Alan J. Pakula’s 1987 film featured Albert Finney, Matthew Modine, and Anderson. For this Great White Way edition, Foster (3:10 to Yuma, The Messenger), in his Broadway debut, is solid as the ultraserious Treat, who will do whatever it takes to protect Phillip, while Baldwin has a field day as Harold, part Leo Gorcey, part Huntz Hall, part Humphrey Bogart as he coolly and calmly handles what should be a life-threatening situation, instead seeing it as an opportunity. But it’s Sturridge (Being Julia, On the Road) who steals the show with his mesmerizing, acrobatic performance as a trapped man-child ready to burst free. Director Daniel Sullivan (Prelude to a Kiss, The Substance of Fire) injects a kind of punk-rock ferocity into the Pinteresque proceedings as he weaves together Treat’s intense rage, Phillip’s sense of wonder, and Harold’s absurdist ramblings on human existence. Orphans is a captivating, if unusual and offbeat, dark comedy that thrills from start to finish.

GLENGARRY GLEN ROSS

Shelley “the Machine” Levene (Al Pacino) talks shop with Ricky Roma (Bobby Cannavale) in Mamet revival (photo by Scott Landis)

Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre
236 West 45th St. between Broadway & Eighth Aves.
Through January 20, $82-$162
www.glengarrybroadway.com

This was supposed to be the season of David Mamet on Broadway, with the premiere of The Anarchist, starring Patti LuPone and Debra Winger, at the Golden Theatre and an all-star revival of the playwright’s 1984 Pulitzer Prize-winning Glengarry Glen Ross two houses down at the Gerald Schoenfeld on West 45th St. The former was a critical and popular disaster, closing after twenty-three previews and seventeen regular performances, and the opening of the latter was pushed back from November 11 to December 8, rarely a good sign, even if Hurricane Sandy was given as at least part of the reason. Glengarry Glen Ross made its debut on the Great White Way in 1984, was a popular movie directed by James Foley in 1992, and won Tony Awards for Best Revival and Best Featured Actor (Liev Schreiber) in Joe Mantello’s 2005 version, but it feels surprisingly dated today. Al Pacino, who was nominated for Best Supporting Actor as hotshot Ricky Roma in the film, now stars as Shelley “the Machine” Levene, a has-been salesman seemingly on his last legs, no longer able to sell the pieces of land owned by the company he has worked for for so long. The shockingly short first act takes place in a cheesy Chinese restaurant set, introducing the six protagonists: Levene, who is begging his boss, John Williamson (David Harbour), to give him the primo leads so he can recapture his mojo; angry, foul-mouthed salesman Dave Moss (Scrubs’s John C. McGinley), who tries to convince the much milder George Aaronow (The West Wing’s Richard Schiff) to help him steal the treasured leads and sell them to a competitor; and finally, “Always be closing” Richard Roma (Tony nominee Bobby Cannavale of Boardwalk Empire, Nurse Jackie, and The Motherfucker with the Hat), who spots an easy mark in James Lingk (Clybourne Park Tony nominee Jeremy Shamos). Before the audience can barely get comfortable in their seats, intermission arrives, severing whatever connections were being made with the story.

Dave Moss (John C. McGinley) shares his master plan with George Aaronow (Richard Schiff) in revival of GLENGARRY GLEN ROSS (photo by Scott Landis)

The second act is much stronger, and thankfully longer, set in the real-estate office that has been ransacked. Here the actors really get to shine and the characters are allowed to develop, with Pacino chewing bits of scenery here and there but taking few big gulps, Schiff being appropriately wormy as the worried Aaronow, McGinley getting very loud as Moss, Harbour giving nuance to Williamson, and Cannavale playing it big and loud as the leader in the Cadillac contest, as the salesman with the most money on the board. But the production, directed by Daniel Sullivan (The Columnist, Prelude to a Kiss), feels old and tired, like we’ve seen it all before. And that might be the problem — that it has returned to Broadway too soon after the previous revival. In addition, with Netflix and iTunes, it is easier to watch the film whenever one wants, and Foley’s movie features additional characters and scenes and the hard-to-beat cast of Pacino, Jack Lemmon, Alec Baldwin, Ed Harris, Alan Arkin, Kevin Spacey, and Jonathan Pryce, making the current revival seem like it’s missing something in comparison. Recent revivals of much older fare, including Death of a Salesman, Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? and Golden Boy, have been successful at least partly because their main stories and characters have timeless qualities, but this Glengarry Glen Ross feels like it’s still stuck in the Reagan ’80s, a relic of another age. It’s still an enjoyable show with solid performances, but it lacks the power that helped previous productions establish its big-time reputation.

SHAKESPEARE IN THE PARK: AS YOU LIKE IT

Andre Braugher’s dual performance as dueling dukes is one of the highlights of AS YOU LIKE IT (photo by Joan Marcus)

Central Park
Delacorte Theater
Through June 30 (no show June 24), free, 8:00
shakespeareinthepark.org

Fifty years ago this week, the Delacorte Theater in Central Park opened with a production of The Merchant of Venice directed by Joe Papp and Gladys Vaughan and starring George C. Scott as Shylock, followed by The Tempest, with Paul Stevens as Prospero and James Earl Jones as Caliban, directed by Gerald Freedman. Since that time, Shakespeare in the Park has been home to more than 150 shows with all-star casts that have been seen by more than five million people. The Delacorte’s golden anniversary season began June 5 with the Bard’s mistaken-identity romantic comedy As You Like It, directed by Public Theater veteran Daniel Sullivan. The story has been shifted to the antebellum South of the 1840s, where Duke Frederick (an excellent Andre Braugher) has been running rampant, exiling people he feels are not loyal to him and threaten his rule, including his older brother, Duke Senior (a fine Braugher again), Senior’s daughter, Rosalind (Lily Rabe), and Orlando (David Furr), a local man who has been mistreated by his older brother, Oliver (Omar Metwally), and had the audacity to beat Frederick’s champion wrestler (Brendan Averett). Disguised as a boy named Ganymede, Rosalind decides to seek out her father in the Forest of Arden, joined on the dangerous journey by her best friend, Celia (Renee Elise Goldsberry), Frederick’s daughter, and Touchstone (Oliver Platt), the court fool. Meanwhile, Orlando is determined to find Rosalind and declare his undying love for her. Sullivan has transformed the eminently likable As You Like It into a somewhat old-fashioned piece of Americana, complete with a four-piece folk-bluegrass band led by banjo favorite Tony Trischka playing songs written by Steve Martin. The first half is indeed very funny and engaging, highlighted by the foot-stomping music and John Lee Beatty’s set, a tall wooden fort that opens up into the dense green Forest of Arden, incorporating Central Park’s real trees. Sullivan adds small touches outside of the script, little flourishes of eye contact and physical shtick that bring playful life to the familiar tale.

Stephen Spinella declares that “all the world’s a stage” in uneven Central Park production (photo by Joan Marcus)

But after intermission, things devolve quickly, as Rabe’s Rosalind turns annoying and obnoxious, Furr’s Orlando becomes silly and overwrought, and the side-plot relationships between Touchstone and busty local lass Audrey (Donna Lynne Champlin) and young Silvius (Will Rogers) and Phoebe (Susannah Flood) seem superfluous at best. Even the music starts feeling repetitive and unnecessary. In the play’s most famous speech, clumsily delivered by an otherwise solid Stephen Spinella as Jaques, Senior’s cynical attendant goes through the seven stages of man, explaining, “All the world’s a stage / And all the men and women merely players. . . . Last scene of all / That ends this strange eventful history, / Is second childishness and mere oblivion, / Sans teeth, sans eyes, sans taste, sans everything.” He could just as well be describing the interminable second act of this well-meaning but ultimately disappointing production. As You Like It runs through June 30, followed July 23 – August 25 by Stephen Sondheim’s Into the Woods, starring Amy Adams, Donna Murphy, Denis O’Hare, and Gideon Glick. Don’t forget that in addition to waiting on line at the Delacorte to get free tickets, you can also enter the daily virtual ticketing lottery online here.

FREE SUMMER THEATER 2012

Andre Braugher plays dual roles in Shakespeare in the Park presentation of AS YOU LIKE IT (photo by Joan Marcus)

Thursday, May 31
through
Sunday, June 24 New York Classical Theatre: Twelfth Night, directed by Stephen Burdman, Central Park, 103rd St. & Central Park West, Thursday through Sunday at 7:00

Tuesday, June 5
through
Saturday, June 30 Shakespeare in the Park: As You Like It, directed by Daniel Sullivan and starring Lily Rabe, Andre Braugher, Stephen Spinella, Oliver Platt, and Renee Elise Goldsberry, with music by Steve Martin, Delacorte Theater, Central Park, 8:00

Wednesday, June 6
through
Saturday, June 23 Inwood Shakespeare Festival: As You Like It, Moose Hall Theatre Company, directed by Ted Minos, Inwood Hill Park Peninsula, Wednesdays through Saturdays at 7:30

Friday, June 22
and
Saturday, June 23 SummerStage Theater: Paige in Full, by Paige Hernandez, directed by Danielle A. Drakes, and featuring DJ Reborn, Red Hook Park, 8:00

Saturday, June 23
through
Sunday, July 15 Boomerang Theatre Company: Hamlet, directed by Tim Errickson, Central Park, 77th St. & Central Park West, Saturdays & Sundays at 2:00

Tuesday, June 26
through
Friday, June 29 River to River Festival: Act Without Words II by Samuel Beckett, Company SJ, TheatreAlley between Nassau & Centre Sts., 9:00

Tuesday, June 26
through
Sunday, July 22 New York Classical Theatre: Twelfth Night, directed by Stephen Burdman, meet at Castle Clinton in Battery Park, Tuesday through Sunday at 7:00

Thursday, July 5
through
Friday, July 20 Piper Theatre Company: Xanadu the Musical, directed by John P. McEneny, Old Stone House, Washington Park, JJ Byrne Playground, Thursdays & Fridays at 8:00

Friday, July 6
and
Saturday, July 7 SummerStage Theater: A King of Infinite Space, by Mando Alvarado, directed by Jerry Ruiz, St. Mary’s Park, 8:00

Saturday, July 7
through
Saturday, July 21 Piper Theatre Company: Island of Doctor Moreau, Old Stone House, Washington Park, JJ Byrne Playground, Saturdays at 8:00

Sunday, July 8
through
Thursday, July 12 River to River Festival: The Saints Tour by Molly Rice, directed by Maureen Towey, 7:00

Thursday, July 12
through
Saturday, July 28 The Drilling Company’s Shakespeare in the Parking Lot: The Merry Wives of Windsor,, Municipal Parking Lot (Ludlow & Broome), Thursday through Saturday, 8:00

Thursday, July 12
through
Sunday, August 5 Hudson Warehouse: The Rover by Aphra Behn, directed by Jesse Michael Mothershed, Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Monument, Riverside Park, Thursday through Sunday at 6:30

Friday, July 13
and
Saturday, July 14 SummerStage Theater: A King of Infinite Space, by Mando Alvarado, directed by Jerry Ruiz, Crotona Park, 8:00

Wednesday, July 18
through
Saturday, August 4 Moose Hall Theatre Company: The Golem, Heart of Light, Mind of Darkness, written and directed by Ted Minos, Inwood Hill Park Peninsula, Wednesdays through Saturdays at 7:30

Monday, July 23
through
Saturday, August 25 Shakespeare in the Park: Into the Woods, directed by Timothy Sheader and starring Amy Adams, Denis O’Hare, Donna Murphy, and Gideon Glick, Delacorte Theater, Central Park, 8:00

Wednesday, July 25
through
Saturday, August 18 Hip to Hip: Hamlet and Comedy of Errors in repertory, multiple locations in Queens, 5:00 or 7:30

Friday, July 27
and
Saturday, July 28 SummerStage Theater: The Power of the Trinity, by Roland Wolf, adapted and directed by Alfred Preisser, with original music composition by Tomas Doncker, Springfield Park, 8:00

Tuesday, July 31 SummerStage Theater: The Power of the Trinity, by Roland Wolf, adapted and directed by Alfred Preisser, with original music composition by Tomas Doncker, Central Park, 8:00

Thursday, August 2
through
Saturday, August 18 The Drilling Company’s Shakespeare in the Parking Lot: Coriolanus,, Municipal Parking Lot (Ludlow & Broome), Thursday through Saturday, 8:00

Friday, August 3
through
Sunday, August 5 SummerStage Theater: The Power of the Trinity, by Roland Wolf, adapted and directed by Alfred Preisser, with original music composition by Tomas Doncker, Marcus Garvey Park, 8:00

Saturday, August 25
through
Monday, August 27 SummerStage Theater: Jason and the Argonauts, by Apollonius Rhodius, new translation by Aaron Poochigian, East River Park, 8:00

THE COLUMNIST

The Alsop brothers (John Lithgow and Boyd Gaines) toast to happier times in THE COLUMNIST (photo by Joan Marcus)

Manhattan Theatre Club at the Samuel J. Friedman Theatre
261 West 47th St. between Broadway & Eighth Aves.
Through June 24, $67-$121
thecolumnistbroadway.com

Based on the real life of American journalist Joseph Alsop, David Auburn’s The Columnist is a rather sterile exercise in twentieth-century historical fiction. Multitalented Tony and Emmy winner and Oscar nominee John Lithgow, a Rochester-born Harvard grad who in recent years has played a serial killer on Dexter, published a series of popular children’s books, and penned his autobiography (An Actor’s Education), gives a wonderful performance as the erudite Alsop, an acerbic columnist who believes he is more powerful than the president. A staunch conservative, he is surprisingly delighted with JFK’s victory, celebrating with his wife, Mary (Margaret Colin), stepdaughter, Abigail (Grace Gummer), and brother and sometime writing partner, Stewart (Boyd Gaines), convinced that the new president will show up at his house on the night of the inauguration. But Alsop’s power and influence begin to wane as he very publicly pushes for greater U.S. involvement in Vietnam, directly challenged by such up-and-coming journalists as David Halberstam (Stephen Kunken), while Stewart tries to protect his brother from a potential scandal surrounding a sexual fling Joe had with a young Russian man (Brian J. Smith) several years before, depicted in a very strong scene that opens the play. Auburn, who won the Pulitzer Prize for his 2000 play, Proof, never quite gets below the surface in The Columnist, resulting in a series of predictable, clichéd moments that feel stale and unnecessary, particularly when delving into the Vietnam war, something in interviews he claimed to know very little about, which shows. He does somewhat better handling the practical marriage between Alsop, a closeted homosexual, and Mary, a respected DC party hostess, although he changes several important facts about their relationship, including its length, and turns Mary’s two daughters into one. Directed by Shakespeare veteran Daniel Sullivan, The Columnist, despite a terrific lede and a Tony-nominated lead actor, is still in need of significant editing.