When it came to home teams vs. visitors, audiences were the winners
By CAROLYN CLAY | December 20, 2011
It's been the visitors versus the home teams this year. Host-with-the-most ArtsEmerson, which launched in the fall of 2010, continued its barrage of intriguing guests, from Ireland's Druid and Abbey Theatres to New York avant-gardists Elevator Repair Service and Mabou Mines, to international pooh-bah Sir Peter Brook. But rather than roll over and play dead, our largest regional troupes, the Huntington Theatre Company and American Repertory Theater, presented strong seasons as well, including imports (England's Propeller at the Huntington) and exports (ART's The Gershwins' Porgy and Bess opens on Broadway next month) of their own. You Republicans can decide whether to call it a trickle-down, but there was also memorable work on smaller stages. GET ME REWRITETwo of the most iconic scores in American musical theater, those of Porgy and Bess and Candide, have long been chained to troublesome librettos. But it's never too late to break free! And 2011 brought narrative improvements to both shows. ART unveiled The Gershwins' Porgy and Bess, helmed by artistic director Diane Paulus, with a book retooled by Pulitzer-winner Suzan-Lori Parks. The result was an American classic given new momentum. And when Norm Lewis, a noble if painfully twisted Porgy, and Audra McDonald, a Bess palpably fighting her addictions, entwined their gorgeous voices around "Bess, You Is My Woman Now," audiences thought they'd gone to the Promised Land those Catfish Rowers keep singing about.
READ the full review here.
Across the river, Obie-winning director Mary Zimmerman returned to Voltaire's 1759 novella to devise a new book for the Leonard Bernstein satiric operetta based on Candide. The result was a witty and imaginative production with shape as well as irony that fielded, in Lauren Molina, a daffily narcissistic Cunégonde glittering and being gay in a bathtub.
READ the full review here.
Related:
Looking back, going forward, Moral surgery, Portraits of artists, More
- Looking back, going forward
Economic recession and post-racial themes abound in Boston’s early 2010 theater repertoire.
- Moral surgery
You know upon meeting Becky Shaw that you're in the presence of a smart, snappy writer. But you picture playwright Gina Gionfriddo as someone more akin to Theresa Rebeck than William Makepeace Thackeray.
- Portraits of artists
Yikes! Is this really what it’s like behind the scenes with, say, the Emerson String Quartet?
- Review: Mixed Magic's Art of Attack
Both the first and the last line we hear in Art of Attack , by Asa Merritt, is: "You must take your opponent into a deep, dark forest where two and two are five and the way out is only wide enough for one."
- Warming up with the Boston theater scene's winter offerings
Although the whirlwind of Scrooges and Rockettes will soon be exiting stage left, the storm of winter theater continues unabated.
- The con goes on
David Mamet has always had a professional fascination with confidence men who pretend to be businessmen.
- Play by play: March 26, 2010
Boston's weekly theater schedule
- Endgame
As Billie Holiday fell apart, so did her fragile if expressive voice.
- Sins of the father
On a rainy afternoon, Hally, short for Harold, (Michael Littig) comes home from school as usual to his wealthy parents' tea room in apartheid-era South Africa.
- Dogging it
There isn't much that's cuter than little doggies, except maybe kittens and babies, but try getting them to parade in a line.
- Classic drama
Theater classics are at a significant disadvantage: overfamiliarity.
- Less
Topics:
Theater
, Theater, Arts, reviews, More
, Theater, Arts, reviews, Plays, year in review, lookback2011, Less