Monday, December 27, 2010

"Darling Divas" Brings Holiday Joy

New Rep’s Darling Divas Deck the Holidays” is a light, enjoyable night of Christmas cheer. In choosing to turn away from the traditional production of “A Christmas Carol,” Kate Warner has instead produced a show that has all that and more of Christmas spirit given off by Scrooge and Tiny Tim. This cabaret-style show includes traditional Christmas songs (and a number of lesser-known Chanukah songs), as well as readings from beloved holiday tales such as “The Gift of the Magi” and “The Night Before Christmas.”


The Divas themselves are a talented bunch, and all are good company for the duration of the show. The star, though, is Bobbie Steinbach, the oldest Diva, and the one who seems most at home in the cabaret setting. Ms. Steinbach’s delivery is both hilarious and touching; her renditions of “The Eight Days of Chanukah” and “Santa Baby” both brought down the house, and her reading of a story of a forbidden Chanukah celebration in the midst of persecution is quite moving.


This balance of funny and touching is nicely held throughout the show. Each Diva shares a childhood memory, and there are those readings of holiday stories; on the comic side, Michele DeLuca has a great performance of “Baby It’s Cold Outside” with the pianist and musical director, Todd C Gordon (Mr. Gordon doesn’t sing, he just speaks loudly), and Miss Steinbach is consistently funny.


Aimee Doherty and Kami Rushell Smith don’t stand out as much among the foursome, but both are appealing ladies with lovely voices, and they do quite a serviceable job.


The “Darling Divas” is well-paced, and leaves you feeling cheerful. And that, I suppose, is the point.


Tuesday, December 14, 2010

The All-Nighter

REVIEW | FRANKIE AND JOHNNY IN THE CLAIR DE LUNE

By Richard Martin

Frankie and Johnny were lovers, goes the old song. There were many versions, all of which bore out in the grimmest way Shakespeare’s observation that the course of true love never did run smooth.

But how things develop with “Frankie and Johnny in the Clair de Lune,” Terrence McNally’s romantic comedy now playing at New Rep’s Black Box Theater, is only vaguely connected to the song, although Johnny (Robert Pemberton) feels the romance of its legend, perhaps having forgotten the outcome. A short-order cook on his first date with Frankie (Anne Gottlieb), the waitress he’s been working with, Johnny sees destiny in their names.

Still, he’s leaving nothing to chance. From the moment we see them – well, actually we hear them for a while first – feverishly coupling on a pullout couch that has instantly turned Frankie’s living room into her bedroom, Johnny is on the move. In the space of however long their afterglow lasts – and it’s not that long – Johnny has pledged his undying love to Frankie, proposed marriage, and envisioned a modest-sized family. To which a completely perplexed Frankie wonders, “What ever happened to a second date?”

But for Johnny, there’s a sense of urgency, not for sex, although that’s never very far from center stage, literally and figuratively, but for Connection with another human being, a bond of intimacy, which he holds is much harder to achieve than what two people do in bed. So begins the quest for which Johnny is determined not simply to enter into the dance of courtship, but to launch an all-night campaign for Frankie’s heart.

Frankie is so panicked by all this that she tells Johnny to leave. It’s not simply that she prefers the slow getting-to-know-you, getting-to-know-all-about-you approach. It’s that she’s had such pain and disappointment in relationships that she’s reluctant to move beyond sex.

Where Johnny longs to find love before it’s too late, Frankie is afraid it’s already too late. The truth is that they both desperately want the same thing, but they don’t think in the same way or have the same openness to emotional risk. As their night plays out, it is often contentious, relieved by some tender moments, occasional humor, Debussy’s Clair de Lune playing softly on the radio, and the night sky’s clair de lune streaming through the window.

McNally wrote “Frankie and Johnny” in the 1980s, at a time when friends were dying of AIDS and many others were deciding to forgo intimate connections. AIDS and its tragic losses do not play a part in the play, but McNally seems to be grieving the decline of close relationships, as if large parts of society had written and produced “Intimacy Lost”. Perhaps he envisioned “Frankie and Johnny” as “Intimacy Regained”.

But if a play is to stand on its own merits, a question that must be asked here is whether such intimacy can be reached in a single night, particularly when at least one person resists the idea. If the dialog had more gradually moved Johnny to appreciate Frankie’s reluctance, it might have made the possibility more convincing. But at times the doggedness of Johnny’s pursuit seems overpowering.

Ms. Gottlieb and Mr. Pemberton immerse themselves in their roles. Only the once or twice that Johnny was moved to tears was he not quite convincing. And despite spending some of their time naked in front of an audience that is close enough to make the fourth wall disappear, the actors are completely without self-consciousness.

The single set, a low-rent, one-room New York apartment that barely qualifies as a studio and can be appreciated only by somebody who’s been inside one, is the brilliant creation of scenic designer Erik Diaz. Its moody, gray-blue hues are deepened by the subdued lighting designed by Chris Brusberg, who lets us see by the light of the moon.

It’s here that Frankie and Johnny are lovers. But is it love?

A Real -- and Terrific -- "Fairy Tale"

If you haven’t made out to Watertown to see New Rep’s “Frankie and Johnny in the Clair de Lune,” get a move on! Time is running short and you don’t want to miss this wonderful production. The play opens (and stays) in a typical cramped New York apartment, as the playwright explores themes of isolation and connection in a world as gray as the walls of the set. McNally calls the play “a romantic fairytale,” and for most of the first act you can’t imagine what he means. We see this room and these two people as disarmingly “real;” we believe in them completely.

Anne Gottlieb and Robert Pemberton brilliantly inhabit the skins and the souls of these two middle-aged people who have fallen into bed at the end of a first date. Frankie is the more cynical of the two. She’s got a wisecrack or a smart answer to repel Johnny’s every attempt at emotional intimacy. Johnny is just as unhappy as she, but his basic exuberance has driven him past despair to a determination to start over, to make a good life, to find the happiness that has eluded them both. And he’s gonna do it tonight and Frankie is gonna be the One. The play consists of his struggle to persuade Frankie to join him in this quest.

But Frankie is done. She wants him out. She is, in turns, puzzled, intrigued, irritated, and frightened by his garrulous persistence. When she pulls mace from her purse, we’re sure many women in the audience were wondering what took her so long. But Johnny charms her, in the oldest sense of the word. He weaves a spell around her, with the aid of the moonlight they can just barely see between two buildings across the way, the music they hear on the radio – the classical DJ plays Debussy’s “Clair de Lune” for them – and the power of his vision. If his utter refusal to give up on Frankie were based only on his needs, he would never succeed, but he pulls her out from behind her own wall of cynicism and despair. He treats her with great gentleness, admiring her body extravagantly, tenderly wrapping a bandage around her cut finger, and affirming the dream she reluctantly reveals. In short, for all his gabbiness, Johnny is not just a narcissist. He “sees” Frankie as each of us wants to be seen, sees the intelligence, the sweetness, the tenderness, and the need hiding behind her wisecracks.

The audience is seduced, too. McNally, two fine actors, and superb direction persuade us to willingly suspend disbelief and choose – as Frankie must choose – to believe in this romantic fairytale that takes place in the light of the moon.

-- Johanna Ettin & Shauna Shames

Monday, December 13, 2010

"Frankie and Johnny": Moonlight Becomes You

By Jack Craib, New Rep Reviewer

As the unseen radio commentator puts it in New Rep‘s current production of a 1987 play, “Frankie and Johnny in the Claire de Lune” by Terrence McNally, “maybe I’m crazy, but I still like to believe in love”. What better holiday gift than a play with a point like that?

With this latest choice by New Rep Artistic Director Kate Warner, she continues her season-long theme of transformative storytelling. This time it’s about two seemingly ordinary co-workers in a downscale eatery, Frankie the waitress and Johnny the cook, on a first date that ends up in Frankie’s bed. McNally is on record as having first identified with Johnny as he was writing the work, only realizing as he saw it first performed (in a workshop by Kathy Bates and F. Murray Abraham) that he was really Frankie. He saw the play as a romantic drama with overtones of a modern day fairy tale, where passion is what connects his characters and thus transforms them.

Initially, Johnny states that there is “no such thing as too hard when you want something”, to which Frankie retorts “yes there is….the other person.” Johnny is perhaps too ready for commitment, whereas Frankie bears both physical and psychological scars from a previous horrific affair as obstacles to her ability to commit. Yet as they listen to the radio broadcast of Debussy’s “Claire de Lune”, declaring it “the most beautiful music in the world”, they begin to discover uncanny similarities in their lives. How these two apparent opposites end up dancing to the same inner music in the last traces of moonlight, even as the radio programming progresses to Wagner and Dvorak, makes for an engaging evening in the theater.

Though they may seem at first a rather uncultured couple, some of the things they have to tell one another are surprisingly profound. Frankie declares that “romance is seeing somebody for what they are and still wanting them, warts and all”, expressing her dream to be a teacher, adding “I hope I have what it takes to be something.” Johnny affirms his conviction that “my life was happening to me; now I’m making it happen.” By evening’s end, they’re ready for anything, even simultaneously brushing their teeth. Life doesn’t get much more intimate than that.

As presented in the real intimacy of New Rep’s Black Box Theater, the performances by the cast of two have to be pitch-perfect, and that they most certainly are. Robert Pemberton, in the showier role of Johnny, and Anne Gottlieb in the even more challenging part of Frankie, couldn’t be better. Director Antonio Ocampo-Guzman has drawn two impressive, emotionally (and often literally) naked performances from them. The scenic design by Erik D. Diaz illuminates the claustrophobic clutter of Frankie’s life, and the costumes (what there are of them when the two actors aren’t providing just what nature gave them) by Deidre McCabe-Gerrard and lighting design by Chris Brusberg create the perfect mood.

As Johnny says, “Something is going on in this room, something important; don’t you feel it?” To paraphrase Johnny, pardon my French, but this is one %#&-ing great show.

Wednesday, December 01, 2010

Holiday Memory - New Rep Family Member

It is time for another New Rep family member's holiday memory!  Join the fun - submit your favorite holiday memory/tradition to holidaytraditions@newrep.org and you'll be entered to win a New Rep Gift Package!  For more information about the prize package and contest rules please click here!
 
Ok, I asked my Daughter if it was okay to tell...she said ok. My daughter decided that she wanted to host Thanksgiving dinner to impress a new Boyfriend. I advised her that it was a rather pressure filled choice but she was determined. I arrived early to help and she really did have it all under control....I helped her a little here and there but she was doing fine. The table looked great and all was going well.........While we were in the kitchen one of our cousins dropped in with a rather large dog....an Irish Setter I think. Well I called everyone to the table just as my daughter was bringing the bird to the table.....well the dog came running up to her and knocked her over...she went one way and the bird went the other way....and before we knew it the dog had grabbed the turkey and ran out of the room! Well my daughter was in tears.....and everyone was chasing the dog....not that we could eat the turkey! My Cousin felt so bad that he went to the nearest Chinese Food restaurant and ordered up a storm.......and dropped it off before he took the dog home.......it was a strange dinner...yams and moo gu gai pan...lol....I don't think my daughter has ever cooked another Thanksgiving dinner. We go out to eat ! Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays to everyone!
- Claire