Yesterday's Broadway warhorses, saddled with today's concerns
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Thursday, September 19, 2024


Yesterday's Broadway warhorses, saddled with today's concerns
Glenn Close performs a scene in "Sunset Boulevard" at the Palace Theater in New York, Feb. 1, 2017. Though products of vastly different times and culture, revivals like this fall Broadway season’s crop — “Romeo and Juliet,” “Our Town,” “Gypsy” and “Sunset Boulevard” — dig so deep into their specific truths that they reach a common, eternal one, from which many others may spring. (Sara Krulwich/The New York Times)

by Jesse Green



NEW YORK, NY.- Two cheers for new voices! Of the 16 productions scheduled to open on Broadway between now and the end of the year, 12 are new to the Boulevard of Broken Budgets.

But I’d like to reserve a third cheer for the fall’s four revivals, which may get less attention, having been this way before, but are likely to earn their keep if history holds true. Old voices are, after all, where new voices come from. And though 240 years separate the Broadway debuts of “Romeo and Juliet” and “Sunset Boulevard,” with “Our Town” and “Gypsy” in between, they all have much in common, at least in their continued haunting of theatergoers’ imaginations.

That haunting arises, in part, from our memories of past stars who hover alongside the new ones. In “Our Town,” Henry Fonda and Paul Newman will be whispering the Stage Manager’s lines to Jim Parsons. Ethel Merman, Angela Lansbury and Patti LuPone will no doubt watch over Audra McDonald as she takes on the role of Rose in “Gypsy.” LuPone will also be looking over Nicole Scherzinger’s shoulder in “Sunset Boulevard”; presumably keeping a safe distance, so will Glenn Close. And though few are likely to remember Robert Goffe, the original Juliet, he too will be felt on Broadway this fall. However long ago, the part was built on him.

But revivals of shows like these have more to offer than ghosts. There’s a reason, aside from name recognition, that they keep coming back. Though products of vastly different times and cultures, they dig so deep into their specific truths that they reach a common, eternal one, from which many others may spring.

Perhaps that’s most evident in “Our Town,” Thornton Wilder’s 1938 play about two families whose ordinary life events, from birth to death, are consecrated by a kind of communal love. Director Kenny Leon said that in his production, “1936 runs into 2024,” allowing the story to serve “as a metaphor for our world, for our country, even our time.”

Two families are also at the center of “Romeo and Juliet,” but Shakespeare’s central theme is less love than hate, or love that is bound to hate by impetuousness, another human perennial. In Andrew Lloyd Webber’s “Sunset Boulevard,” based on the 1950 Billy Wilder film, it’s the love of self, deformed by delusion, that’s under the microscope. And in “Gypsy,” by Jule Styne, Stephen Sondheim and Arthur Laurents, a similar self-love, masquerading as maternal, devolves into an almost “Lear”-like madness.

George C. Wolfe, who is directing that 1959 musical, sees classics as works that, paradoxically, are always new. “I think they answer a fundamental need to see ourselves in the mirror,” he said. “Not calcified as cultural memories — not how my parents looked — but how do I look now?”

So in exploring a Rose for today with McDonald, he sees more than a frantic single mother grooming her daughters to fulfill her own fantasies by performing in vaudeville and, when that fails, stripping in burlesque.

“I am fascinated by the use of the word ‘monster’ in the show,” Wolfe said. “Do we call this woman a monster or do we see her as a woman who says, ‘I ain’t doing wife, I ain’t doing mother’? And what does that say about the shifting definition of ambitious women?”

With McDonald in the role — and Kamala Harris running for president — it seems inevitable and timely to specify Wolfe’s phrase as “ambitious Black women.” Reports that Rose’s daughters would be cast and portrayed as Black or biracial have led to advance criticism from those who think such choices undermine the story. “In 1920s America, when the show is set,” John McWhorter wrote in the Times, “racism and segregation remained implacable forces in popular culture, and the only stardom a Black Rose would have realistically sought for her kids would have been among Black audiences.”

Wolfe declined to address the issue directly, saying he doesn’t yet know what he and the cast will discover in rehearsal: “If we already know what we’re going to find, let’s all go home and take a nap.” But he points out that the show’s subtitle is “An American Fable.”

In a way, all warhorses are fables, stories that are roomy enough to let artists of any era maneuver among their archetypes. Today, that often means a wider diversity than the playwrights imagined; what Leon calls identity-conscious casting is taken for granted in all of the fall’s revivals. If the actor playing Norma Desmond in “Sunset Boulevard” is Filipino-Russian-Hawaiian, like Scherzinger, then so is Norma. And if, in “Our Town,” one of the two main families is white (Richard Thomas, Katie Holmes and Zoey Deutch play the Webbs) and the other is Black (Ephraim Sykes, Michelle Wilson and Billy Eugene Jones play the Gibbses) then the play will necessarily consider what it means — to the parents and their children — when the children intermarry.

“I wanted the older generation to learn from the younger generation,” Leon said.

He might also be speaking for Sam Gold’s production of “Romeo and Juliet,” starring the “Heartstopper” heartthrob Kit Connor and Rachel Zegler, who as Maria in Steven Spielberg’s remake of “West Side Story” played a Juliet descendant. Though it’s unclear which other aspects of their identities will be emphasized — Connor came out as bisexual in 2022; Zegler is of Colombian and Polish heritage — their youth surely will: He’s 20 and she’s 23.

That’s older than as written, but who today wants to see a 16-year-old Romeo woo a 13-year-old Juliet?

Still, the actors’ relative youth is useful to Gold’s exploration of young people’s anger at the world left to them by their elders. His production, he said, is thus set in “a Gen Z world with elements drawn from club culture and basement hangouts” — a vibe that pop hitmaker Jack Antonoff no doubt intends to accentuate with the one or two songs and underscoring he is providing. Also suitable for Gen Z: the running time. Gold has made cuts, he said, to approximate the “two hours’ traffic” of the stage described in the play’s prologue (yet rarely achieved).

If we have finally reached the point, at least with Shakespeare, where diversity’s the norm, not a trick or a self-conscious concept, the question remains: Are we there yet with musicals?

Though purists might raise the same questions about “Sunset Boulevard” that McWhorter raised about “Gypsy” — Norma Desmond is, after all, a Hollywood star in the silent-movie era — no one seemed upset about Scherzinger’s background when the production, directed by Jamie Lloyd, opened last year in London. Perhaps that’s because it was secondary to Lloyd’s larger innovation: downsizing the show’s camp factor by upsizing the performers’ faces. At key moments, the audience sees the performers on a giant screen that, as Matt Wolf wrote in his New York Times review, “broadcasts every emotion (and facial pore).”

That’s a literal version of the double vision all artistically successful revivals must aim for. They must find the micro of today in the macro of forever. Handled boldly but thoughtfully, warhorses can do that. They got to be warhorses for a reason: They are the works that keep on working.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










Today's News

September 12, 2024

French ship that sank in 1856 disaster is found off Massachusetts coast

'Extra! Extra!: News Photographs from 1908-1975' opens at Howard Greenberg Gallery

Fontaine's Auction Gallery to offer Fine & Decorative Arts Sept. 28-29

Petroliana & Advertising auction at Miller & Miller Auctions, Ltd. featured 309 lots and grossed $683,308

They said her music was too exotic. Now she's a classical star.

Juilliard receives $20 million to unite disciplines and support jazz

Prison where Capote interviewed killers for 'In Cold Blood' will open to tourists

Andréhn-Schiptjenko opens its first solo-exhibition by British-Nigerian artist Ranti Bam

The Belvedere opens Kazuko Miyamoto's largest international retrospective to date

V&A celebrates 100 years of theatre and performance with new free display

Amy Sherald, brazen optimist

First US retrospective of Art Deco icon Tamara de Lempicka premieres in San Francisco

Solo exhibition of new works by Albert Oehlen opens at Galerie Max Hetzler

Art shows and exhibitions to see this fall

Exhibition features street photography by Michael Silberman

Art gallery to explore Indigenous culture throughout fall in new exhibit

The lost museum in the Mauritshuis

Museum Ludwig announces 'Schultze Projects #4-Kresiah Mukwazhi'

Yesterday's Broadway warhorses, saddled with today's concerns

Seeing the fashion world through the eyes of an 8-year-old

Why do Americans want to dress like Swedes?

Are art and science forever divided? Or are they one and the same?

Xavier Hufkens opens an exhibition dedicated to Jan Vercruysse

Boosting Productivity with AI-Driven PDF Reading Solutions

Harnessing Chat PDF GPT for Smarter Document Handling

The Rise of Online Betting in Singapore: A New Way to Unwind

Why Affordable Follower Packages are the Secret to Instagram Success

5 Common Techniques Used in Filmmaking

Luxury Caribbean Experiences: From Private Villas to Exclusive Tours

Cross-Boundary Innovation: Qiwei Li Forges a Design Legend with Exceptional Articles

6 Precautions to Take Before Renting a Furnished Property

How Art Can Help When Dealing With a Cancer Diagnosis

Why Regular Commercial Cleaning is Essential for Your Business

The Influence Of Design On Modern Road Safety

From Chaos to Clarity: Untangling Complex Pay Structures with Compensation Management Software

Vancouver's Most Common Appliance Issues: What to Watch Out For and How to Fix Them

Top 5 Reasons Dallas Businesses Are Switching to Managed IT Services in 2024

The Environmental Benefits of Choosing Professional Laundry Services

Choosing the Right Size for Your Roofer Dumpster Rental

Choosing the Right Kitchen Plumbing Services: What Every Homeowner Should Know

The Top Causes of Water Pressure Problems in Homes

Advantages of Frameless Glass Shower Enclosures for Modern Bathrooms

Making the Switch: A Complete Guide to Tub-to-Shower Conversion Remodeling

The Benefits of Professional Carpet and Upholstery Cleaning for Healthier Homes

Gunite vs. Fiberglass: Deciding on the Best Pool Construction Method for Your Home

The Benefits of Free Junk Car Removal Services

Top Hardscaping Services to Elevate Your Outdoor Living Space

Top Reasons to Invest in Professional Move In/Out Cleaning Services

Roof Installation 101: What Homeowners Need to Know Beforehand

Gutter Cleaning: The Key to Preventing Water Damage and Ensuring Longevity




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
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

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