Monday, August 24, 2009
Friday, August 21, 2009
8/18/09
On a day trip we went up to NYC to see Population 8 at the Fringe Festival. (http://www.theprocessgroup.org/)
The first act was pretty terrible, I was lost and wanted to get out of there because there was too much projection (like, video on a screen) used, no character development. The only thing that was keeping me there was Spring Awakening alumnus Gideon Glick who was fantastic and well cast. It was clear that it was playwright Nicholas Gray's first play (now my friend insisted that he was a famous critic and I told my friend that I own Frank Rich's book of criticism yet I had never heard of him).
However, the second act was great. The writing found its groove, the characters were real, and the storyline was attention grabbing. It was like a Jekyll/Hyde storyline- it was hard to believe the acts were written by the same person! I would recommend it to Gideon Glick fans, it's only $15, I would recommend it more if you're an Equity member and it's free.
I also happened to win the virtual line for the Public Theater's Shakespeare in the Park production of Euripides's The Bacchae starring one of my favoriteeee actors (no, seriously) Jonathan Groff. The production was, overall, okay. Jonathan Groff was excellent. Maybe I'm biased, but I thoroughly enjoyed his Dionysus. I thought it was fresh, funny, and surprising. Anthony Mackie was also good as Pentheus but the rest of the production was a complete bore. The direction was a mess, the costumes were terrible, and actors who weren't in scenes at hand were wandering around the stage. It's free, so if you're a Groff fan it's worth it, if you can sit through classical theater. It's only 90 minutes so you won't die of boredom. ;)
Edit- This article/blog from Newsweek perfectly describes how I felt about Groff's Dionysus. Give it a read:
Shows I Want to See
- Bye Bye Birdie (Matt Doyle, Allie Trimm, John Stamos!!)
- I will probably see the Neil Simon plays (Brighton Beach Memoirs/Broadway Bound) if the reviews are good and/or tickets are cheap
- God of Carnage (They have standing room and I've heard nothing but good!)
- Hamlet (Shakespeare, Jude Law, $25. Done.)
- Ordinary Days
- Othello (with my NYU discount obvs)
- Our Town
- Toxic Avenger (Diana DeGarmo!)
Best of What's Running
all right so before i start with new shows as i see them, here's the best of what I saw last semester and prior:
- next to normal and the revival of hair are the two best shows on broadway, hands down. moving, brilliant, original pieces of theater. i will probably spend most of my time at the booth and hirschfeld theatres this year.
- west side story is great, if you can be sure to see tony award winner karen olivo and josefina scaglione. i hear the show's not worth it without them.
- 9 to 5 is great fun! but by the time anyone reads this (ever?) it will be closed.
- billy elliot was excellent, as the awards say (although i find next to normal superior). i saw kiril kulish as billy and enjoyed him very much.
- in the heights is a great show, although i haven't seen it without lin-manuel miranda, original writer and star. south pacific is great if you can get tickets, although i'd recommend waiting for kelli o'hara to return. wicked is great the first time if you haven't seen it.
Why?
Why blog? I'm a journalism major who lives in Manhattan and sees a ridiculous amount of shows. Also, I have lots of opinions. Why not share my opinions?
-Sarah
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