czwartek, 18 lutego 2016

Fwd: Theater Update: Setting Nerves on Edge in London

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From: NYTimes.com <nytdirect@nytimes.com>
Date: Wed, Feb 17, 2016 at 7:00 PM
Subject: Theater Update: Setting Nerves on Edge in London
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Wednesday, February 17, 2016

The New York Times

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The New York Times

Wednesday, February 17, 2016

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Ben Brantley in London
Josef Davies (sitting, center), David Morrissey (standing, right) and other cast members in Martin McDonagh's
Helen Maybanks
By BEN BRANTLEY

Martin McDonagh and Caryl Churchill's two plays, so different, are united by extreme narrative tension.

Sheridan Smith as Fanny Brice in
Marc Brenner
By BEN BRANTLEY

In this revival, Ms. Smith plays Fanny Brice, the role that sent Barbra Streisand soaring into the stratosphere in the 1960s.

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Reviews
Timothée Chalamet stars in
'Prodigal Son,' John Patrick Shanley's Exploration of the Student He Once Was
By BEN BRANTLEY

This Manhattan Theater Club play depicts a self-worshiping, caustic pupil who intrigues and frustrates his boarding-school teachers.

Mahershala Ali, left, and Tessa Thompson in
A Campus Caldron Too Hot to Touch in 'Smart People'
By CHARLES ISHERWOOD

Characters in Lydia R. Diamond's drama grapple with race, class, prejudice, identity and sexuality.

From left, Sandra Delgado, Eric Lynch and Alejandra Escalante in
Bolaño's Mysterious '2666,' Distilled to 5½ Hours by the Goodman Theater
By CHARLES ISHERWOOD

In this ambitious staging, a tale that runs about 900 pages is rendered through informative sketches of events, losing some of its shimmering layers.

Mike Birbiglia in
In 'Thank God for Jokes,' Mike Birbiglia Tells His Side of the Story
By NEIL GENZLINGER

Mr. Birbiglia's one-man show is an indescribably ridiculous collection of anecdotes and asides that miraculously blend into a whole.

David Edward Jackson, left, and Jonathan Randell Silver in
In 'Please Continue,' Human Nature Gets a Lab Test
By ANITA GATES

This play at the Ensemble Studio Theater recalls a 1960s experiment involving perceived shocks and suffering.

 
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News and Features
Joel Grey in his Manhattan apartment.
Joel Grey, a Broadway Eminence, Comes of Age at 83
By CHARLES ISHERWOOD

Mr. Grey won an Oscar and a Tony for his role in "Cabaret." Now, in a new memoir, he talks about his years in showbiz — and in the closet.

Ralph Macchio at the June Havoc Theater.
It's O.K. With Ralph Macchio if You Call Him the Karate Kid
By ERIK PIEPENBURG

Now 54, the '80s teen heartthrob returns to the New York stage in a play about growing up Italian-American.

Martyna Majok
Martyna Majok, Putting Immigrant Lives on Center Stage
By LAURA COLLINS- HUGHES

Ms. Majok grew up in a gritty stretch of North Jersey, the daughter of a house cleaner. She now writes plays infused with economic insecurity.

Richard Shoberg and Catherine Russell in
Warren Manzi, Author of New York's Longest-Running Play, Dies at 60
By MARGALIT FOX

"Perfect Crime" logged its 11,824th performance, despite the fact that critics often did not like it and theatergoers often did not understand it.

 
Critics' Picks
A scene from the theatrical adaptation of
A Whirlwind of Delicious Gossip in 'Sense & Sensibility'
By BEN BRANTLEY

Vanessa Vache and Alex Grubbs in
Review: 'Utility,' a Woman's Dance With Despair
By LAURA COLLINS-HUGHES

Jessy Smith, foreground, and Erik Abbott-Main in
'The Grand Paradise' Summons a '70s Pleasure Palace
By BEN BRANTLEY

The actress Monique Sanchez, illuminated by audience members' cellphones at a performance of the Drunk Shakespeare Society at Roy Arias Stages.
'Drunk Shakespeare,' Where the Tipsy and the Sober Take Liberties
By NEIL GENZLINGER

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