'The Connector' review: When fake news was all the rage

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Wednesday, May 1, 2024


'The Connector' review: When fake news was all the rage
From left: Ann Sanders, Jessica Molaskey, Scott Bakula and Danielle Lee Greaves in the new musical “The Connector,” at the MCC Theater in New York, Jan. 11, 2024. This Off Broadway musical follows a promising young magazine journalist turned fabulist who benefits from a long history of male editorial vanity. (Sarah Krulwich/The New York Times)

by Jesse Green



NEW YORK, NY.- If you’re even a little sensitive to signs of sociopathy, you’d peg Ethan Dobson right away. Someone at the start of a promising career in journalism who is so aggressively flattering and greasily evasive, with a snap-on, snakelike, aw-shucks smile, has got to have a scheme up his sleeve. Or rather, in Ethan’s case, a dangerous bunch of lies in his pocket.

To ask why the editors of such an obvious fabulist don’t catch him until they’ve published at least six of his articles, each one a long, lurid and uncheckable fantasy, is to ask why the editors of The New Republic took so long to catch Stephen Glass doing much the same thing. Or why the editors of Rolling Stone took so long to catch Sabrina Erdely; USA Today, Jack Kelley; The Washington Post, Janet Cooke; and The New York Times, Jayson Blair.

They didn’t want to.

That’s the most intriguing idea to emerge from “The Connector,” a murky new musical about journalistic fabrication that opened on Tuesday at MCC Theater. It sees Ethan (Ben Levi Ross) as the beneficiary of a long history of male editorial vanity that sentimentalizes its past and falls for the excesses of New Journalism over old facts. That makes Conrad O’Brien (Scott Bakula) — the head of a prestigious monthly called The Connector — an easy mark; when he takes Ethan under his handsomely graying wing, he thinks he’s securing his glorious legacy when actually he’s destroying it.

But that animating idea is also a problem because aside from Jason Robert Brown’s typically propulsive songs, which excite even the most absurd moments of Jonathan Marc Sherman’s book, the engine of the story, set in the 1990s, depends on uncertainty about Ethan’s veracity. That’s a nonstarter. After just one meeting at the magazine, a young copy editor and frustrated writer named Robin (Hannah Cruz) is already suspicious: “I’m watching you map the boundaries,” she sings, in a number that also serves as a vaguely romantic red herring. And the magazine’s “fact-checking legend,” Muriel, played by Jessica Molaskey, sees right through him even faster.

So do we, and we quickly lose interest.

That’s not the fault of the beamish, resourceful Ross, who, as a recent Evan Hansen, has experience portraying liars. Here, though, he has little to play; not pinning Ethan down is how “The Connector,” conceived and directed by Daisy Prince, keeps itself moving forward. This leaves the show devoid of psychology — the most important thing a musical might have added to the already well-covered histories of journalists who make stuff up. It helped, if you believed him, that Jayson Blair, after his deceptions were discovered, explained that he suffered from bipolar disorder.

But Ethan? We have no idea. The worst impediment we learn about him, in a song called “So I Came to New York,” is that he’s from a place where “everyone’s a scumbag”: New Jersey.

In the same song we learn that Robin is from a place where “everyone’s an asshole”: Texas. Although she and Ethan bond over their parallel tracks to the big city, their trajectories once there are inevitably different. Robin, both a woman in a man’s world and a Latina in a white one, watches with mounting incredulity as Ethan’s star rises while hers stays put. “Half the stories of the world are left unwritten,” she sings in a bravura number called “Cassandra.”

Positioning Robin as an unheeded prophetess and an eventual participant in Ethan’s undoing is a smart way to explore the sexism of the media world at the time. But positioning her as Ethan’s maybe-girlfriend — as if in obeisance to and at the same time defiance of some foundational rule of musical theater — undoes that work. She’s finally as opaque as Ethan.

Brown’s score, often big, loud and thrillingly sung, goes some distance toward addressing that systemic problem by squashing it. But unlike the shapely, strongly hooked songs he wrote for “Parade,” “The Last Five Years,” “13” and “Honeymoon in Vegas,” many of those in “The Connector” meander, as if looking for a point, or to avoid one.

Particularly problematic are the numbers that illustrate Ethan’s subjects, including a flamboyant Greenwich Village Scrabble shark, a Black “off-the-books political operative” and a group of pilgrims to the Western Wall in Jerusalem. In what I hope is meant to suggest the falseness of these stories, Brown pounds the pastiche in the songs so hard it borders on minstrelsy: hip-hop for the fixer; fiddle schmaltz for the pilgrims.

If this is satire, like “The Lifespan of a Fact,” a much lighter treatment of a similar subject, it sits uncomfortably with the chic, swift seriousness of Prince’s staging, on a set by Beowulf Boritt, darkly lit by Jeanette Oi-Suk Yew, that consists mostly of magazine page proofs and towering stacks of manuscripts. The same tonal ambiguity destabilizes Sherman’s book, which accurately sets up the paranoia of the period — when conglomerates stripped legacy media properties for parts as the internet ate up their readership — but then goes too far. The multinational taking over The Connector is the consonant cluster VorschlagXE. Its top priority is repainting the office walls turquoise.

“Vorschlag” means “suggestion” in German, and I wish “The Connector” had taken that hint. Subtlety would help the audience understand how to read it. As it stands, we are so far ahead of the story that even the good parts feel like filler.

In a way, that makes sense, given Ethan’s puffed-up prose. The samples offered are purple and banal, hardly living up to Gabriel García Márquez’s witticism about similar fabrications. It was unfair, García Márquez wrote, that Cooke’s Washington Post article about a (nonexistent) 8-year-old heroin addict won a Pulitzer Prize for journalism — but just as unfair that it did not win one for fiction.

In other words, what in a newspaper is lying may be style in a novel. “The Connector,” as perhaps its title means to imply, wants to stake out the gray space in between. This is where Conrad, the editor-in-chief, thinks journalism must live: “We are not purveyors of facts, we are tellers of truths,” he sings in what amounts to a mission statement for the magazine and the musical. Not buying that fatuous distinction, Muriel, whom Molaskey handily makes the most complex character among a crowd of cartoons, offers a rebuttal in what may be the only ode to fact-checking ever written. “I’ll believe in god when I see her,” she sings. The song is called “Proof.”

“The Connector” might have benefited from Muriel’s dedication to detail. (You can’t play more than seven letters at a time in Scrabble.) Yet in the end the problem with the musical isn’t the unconvincing rendition of the world of journalism or even the pesky little errors. The problem is its lack of perceptible human insight. It doesn’t need a fact checker so much as a fabulist.



‘The Connector’: Through March 17 at MCC Theater, Manhattan; mcctheater.org. Running time: 1 hour 45 minutes.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










Today's News

February 8, 2024

Eileen Agar: Her jewel-like paintings stretched Surrealism

Billy Joel said he'd retired from pop. Here's what brought him back.

Hannah Traore Gallery presents 'Chella Man: It Doesn't Have To Make Sense'

Exploring Ghana, with contemporary art as a guide

Roelant Savery, the most notable painter of the legendary (extinct) dodo, now on view at Mauritshuis

'Larry Bell: All Glass' opens February 8 at Anthony Meier

Toby Keith, larger-than-life country music star, dies at 62

Clyde Taylor, literary scholar who elevated Black cinema, dies at 92

PHI Centre: a new program combining augmented reality and virtual reality

Carole Gibbons joins Hales

Tony Albert's 'The Garden + Forbidden Fruit' alongside a curated exhibition of emerging first nations artists

Collection of Mike Bossy takes aim at Heritage's Winter Platinum Night Sport

Contemporary German artist André Butzer's work now on view at CARBON 12

Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery announces major publication

Wellesley College alumna Lorraine O'Grady '55 brings 'Both/And' exhibit to the Davis Museum

Kenyan-American artist Wangechi Mutu's multidisciplinary practice from the mid-1990s to today

'Aria Dean: Abattoir' is New York-based artist's first exhibition in the UK

'Emi e dames messeur' comes from a sign seen on a street in Saint-Gilles in the Belgian capital

Exhibition brings together a curated selection of the very finest prints by photography's most influential artists

TornabuoniArt opens 'Carla Lonzi: Self-portrait of a generation'

'The Connector' review: When fake news was all the rage

Tyne Daly withdraws from 'Doubt' on Broadway, citing health

The Importance of Having Good Quality Racks in the Industry

Exploring Art in Bergen: A Vibrant Journey

The Secret Behind Toyotas' Enduring Legacy

Empowering Creativity: The Rise of DIY LED Video Walls for Enthusiasts and Entrepreneurs

A Commercial Prodigy in Music: The Outstanding Contributions of Ruiqi Zhao in the Global Film and Copyright Music Market

Yaling Wu: The Creative Force Behind the 34th and 35th Miss Asia International Global Finals, Leading the Event to the I




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

sa gaming free credit
Attorneys
Truck Accident Attorneys
Accident Attorneys

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site Parroquia Natividad del Señor
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful