Terry Teachout's Blog, page 112

December 20, 2012

TT: Further up the road

In today's Wall Street Journal drama column I review the off-Broadway premiere of Amy Herzog's The Great God Pan and a Boston remounting of David Cromer's production of Our Town . Here's an excerpt.

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Few things in theater are more exciting than watching a talented young artist come into her own. That's what has been happening to Amy Herzog. In "After the Revolution," the story of a family of red-diaper leftists, and "4000 Miles," its sequel, Ms. Herzog showed herself to be possessed of a rare gift: the ability to write witty, incisive studies of people in whom the personal has collided with the political to potentially devastating effect. What is most striking about those two plays is that they are informed by ideology without being driven by it: Their tone is as light as their subject matter is dark. Much the same can be said of "The Great God Pan," Ms. Herzog's new play, which is not as effective as its predecessors but still leaves no doubt of her gifts.

tggp3.jpg__960x480_q85_crop_upscale.jpg"The Great God Pan" is "about" recovered memory in the same way that "After the Revolution" and "4000 Miles" are "about" Communism: Its nominal subject is a pretext for the exploration of the personalities of its characters. Jamie (Jeremy Strong), the protagonist of "The Great God Pan," is a pleasant but emotionally inhibited young journalist whose glassy surface is shattered when he discovers more or less simultaneously that (A) he may have been molested as a child and (B) Paige (Sarah Goldberg), his longtime girlfriend, is pregnant....

It's a worthy premise, but Ms. Herzog doesn't quite manage to bring it off. Not only does "The Great God Pan" lack suppleness--the plot feels schematic--but the play's principal characters are drawn so closely to their new-class type as to suggest a satirical intent that is at odds with the play's emotional weight....

David Cromer's universally acclaimed production of "Our Town" originated in Chicago in 2008, ran for more than 600 performances Off Broadway, then transferred successfully to Los Angeles. Now it has been remounted by Boston's Huntington Theatre Company, with Mr. Cromer repeating his coolly ironic performance as the Stage Manager. I caught it in New York and was stunned--no lesser word is strong enough--by the potency with which Mr. Cromer re-envisioned Thornton Wilder's 1938 masterpiece about life in a small New Hampshire town, dressing his cast in street clothes and encouraging them to act with casual, desentimentalizing directness. You can't help but wonder whether so overwhelming a show can stand up to repeat viewings, so I decided to drive up to Boston and see for myself. The answer is decidedly in the affirmative....

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Read the whole thing here .

A trailer for The Great God Pan:
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Published on December 20, 2012 21:00

TT: Everything old is new again

My "Sightings" column in today's Journal is devoted to Recomposed by Max Richter , an avant-garde rewrite of Vivaldi's Four Seasons. Here's an excerpt.

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Brace yourselves, music lovers: Antonio Vivaldi's "Four Seasons" has come to Greenwich Village. (Le) Poisson Rouge, an ultra-trendy nightspot (superfluous parentheses in the original) which bills itself as a "multimedia art cabaret" that seeks to "revive the symbiotic relationship between art and revelry," booked a two-night run of classical music's most overplayed masterpiece.

Why? Because "The Four Seasons" has been refurbished by Max Richter, an avant-garde composer of minimalist inclination, and recorded for Deutsche Grammophon by violinist Daniel Hope, who played it earlier this week at (Le) Poisson Rouge. And before you bruise your eyeballs by rolling them, here's the real surprise: "Recomposed by Max Richter," as Mr. Hope's new CD is called, is a bewitchingly brilliant musical hybrid that manages against all odds to breathe life into an exhausted warhorse that a great many listeners--myself included--long ago ceased to find listenable.

Here's how Mr. Richter explains what he did to "The Four Seasons": "In my notes you will find parts that consist of 90% of my own material; but on the other hand you will find moments where I have only altered a couple of notes in Vivaldi's original score and shortened, prolonged or shifted some of the beats. I literally wrote myself into Vivaldi's score." That bald description, however, does nothing to suggest the arresting freshness with which Mr. Richter has taken the repetitive patterns of "The Four Seasons" and passed them through the twin refracting prisms of post-minimalist classical composition and modern dance music.

Not at all surprisingly, musical neophobes bristle at the very thought of "Recomposed by Max Richter." The headline of David Hurwitz's grumpy Classics Today review speaks for all such folk: "Vivaldi Discomposed, or Maybe Just Dissed." I can't help but wonder whether these listeners are aware that long before the coining of the hipper-than-thou term "remix," such acts of creative reconstruction were common throughout the world of art....

frankenthaler1.jpgEven more radical is Helen Frankenthaler's "For E.M.," the 1981 painting in which the founder of color-field abstraction took Edouard Manet's Still Life with Carp , an 1864 canvas that hangs in the Art Institute of Chicago, and turned it into an abstract painting whose intimate relationship to Manet's original is still self-evident. Ms. Frankenthaler described her method this way: "I decided to painstakingly copy areas and colors, but there's no fish in my painting....At times I couldn't resist ignoring the Manet to meet the needs of my own abstract canvas. Still, side by side the similarities should be obvious" So they are--yet "For E.M." is a fully independent creation whose bold luminosity can be relished regardless of whether you know the Manet painting from which it derives.....

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Read the whole thing here .

A trailer about Recomposed by Max Richter:
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Published on December 20, 2012 21:00

TT: Almanac

"You can't order remembrance out of a man's mind."

William Makepeace Thackeray, The Virginians
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Published on December 20, 2012 21:00

TT: A ghost of Christmases past

magoochristmas.jpgI don't watch Christmas specials anymore, not even A Charlie Brown Christmas , whose annual telecasts are now so disfigured by commercials and cuts that I can no longer bear to see that exquisite little show in its present state. But I'm going to make an exception for Mister Magoo's Christmas Carol , which was originally broadcast by NBC on December 18, 1962 and will air once again on that network on Saturday night at eight p.m. EST in commemoration of the show's fiftieth anniversary.

Mister Magoo's Christmas Carol was the first animated Christmas special produced specifically for television. Not only is Barbara Chain's script unexpectedly faithful to Charles Dickens' book, but the score, which was written by the high-powered duo of Jule Styne and Bob Merrill, is well-crafted and charming. The show was a hit and promptly became a holiday staple, so much so that the writers of Hill Street Blues paid tribute to it in "Santa Claustrophobia," a 1982 Christmas episode in which the famously irascible Belker hurried home alone after his shift was over to watch it in his shabby apartment.

mrmagoo.jpgAlas, Mister Magoo's Christmas Carol, like the nearsighted Mr. Magoo himself, vanished from the airwaves a quarter-century ago. In 2009 Darrell Van Citters, himself an animation director, wrote an excellent book that chronicles its making. (He also hosts a blog devoted to the program.) Even so, you have to have a long memory to know what a powerful impression it made on those who, like me, first saw Mister Magoo's Christmas Carol when it was brand new.

My family watched Mister Magoo's Christmas Carol every December--it was one of our compulsory holiday rituals--and I plan to watch it on Saturday with Mrs. T, who is exactly my age but has, much to my surprise, never seen it. While I expect it will be shortened--that's in the nature of things--I'm prepared to overlook my reflexive purism this time around. I only wish that my mother could be around to watch it with us, but she won't be far from our thoughts.
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Published on December 20, 2012 11:22

December 19, 2012

TT: So you want to see a show?

Here's my list of recommended Broadway, off-Broadway, and out-of-town shows, updated weekly. In all cases, I gave these shows favorable reviews (if sometimes qualifiedly so) in The Wall Street Journal when they opened. For more information, click on the title.



BROADWAY:

Annie (musical, G, most performances sold out last week, reviewed here)

Dead Accounts (serious comedy, PG-13, closes Feb. 24, most performances sold out last week, reviewed here)

Evita (musical, PG-13, closes Jan. 26, reviewed here)

Glengarry Glen Ross (drama, R, closes Jan. 20, all performances sold out last week, reviewed here)

Golden Boy (drama, PG-13, closes Jan. 20, reviewed here)

The Mystery of Edwin Drood (musical, PG-13, most performances sold out last week, closes Mar. 10, reviewed here)

Once (musical, G/PG-13, all performances sold out last week, reviewed here)

Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (drama, PG-13/R, reviewed here)

OFF BROADWAY:

Avenue Q (musical, R, adult subject matter and one show-stopping scene of puppet-on-puppet sex, reviewed here)

The Fantasticks (musical, G, suitable for children capable of enjoying a love story, reviewed here)

Golden Age (comedy, PG-13, extended through Jan. 13, reviewed here)

The Piano Lesson (drama, PG-13, extended through Jan. 13, reviewed here)

Tribes (drama, PG-13, closes Jan. 20, reviewed here)

Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike (comedy, PG-13, closes Jan. 13, reviewed here)

IN BOSTON:

Our Town (drama, G, remounting of off-Broadway production, extended through Jan. 25, original production reviewed here)

CLOSING NEXT WEEK IN MADISON, N.J.:

Trelawny of the "Wells" (comedy, G, not well suited to young children, closes Dec. 30, reviewed here)

CLOSING NEXT WEEK ON BROADWAY:

Bring It On (musical, G, closes Dec. 30, reviewed here)

A Christmas Story (musical, G, closes Dec. 30, nearly all performances sold out last week, reviewed here)

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Published on December 19, 2012 21:00

TT: Almanac

"Memory is the treasury and guardian of all things."

Cicero, De oratore
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Published on December 19, 2012 21:00

December 18, 2012

TT: Snapshot

David Frye impersonates Lyndon Johnson, Kirk Douglas, Richard Nixon, and Robert Kennedy on an episode of The Ed Sullivan Show that originally aired on December 24, 1967:



(This is the latest in a series of arts-related videos that appear in this space each Monday and Wednesday.)
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Published on December 18, 2012 21:00

TT: Almanac

"As a bird that wandereth from her nest, so is a man that wandereth from his place."

Proverbs 27:8
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Published on December 18, 2012 21:00

December 17, 2012

TT: Almanac

Through all the seas of all Thy world, slam-bangin' home again.

Rudyard Kipling, "M'Andrew's Hymn"
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Published on December 17, 2012 20:19

TT: Lookback

new-york-behind-the-top-of-statue-of-liberty-picture.jpgFrom 2007:

At various points along the way, I was sure I was going to be a lawyer, a high-school teacher, a jazz musician, and a psychotherapist, and I fully expected to pursue each of these professions within the borders of the Midwestern state where I was born. Instead I wake each morning, climb down from the cozy loft in which I sleep, turn on a small electronic device that in my youth was unimaginable save to science-fiction writers, and spend the day writing about the arts. I don't live in a house, don't own a car, don't have a lawn to mow, don't know any of my neighbors. I am, in short, a New Yorker...


Read the whole thing here .
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Published on December 17, 2012 20:19

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