niedziela, 12 sierpnia 2018

Fwd: Theater Update: A 'Boys in the Band' Divie

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---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: NYTimes.com <nytdirect@nytimes.com>
Date: śr., 8 sie 2018, 19:01
Subject: Theater Update: A 'Boys in the Band' Divie
To: <pascal.alter@gmail.com>



Onstage after a heart attack
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Wednesday, August 8, 2018

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Dear Theater Fans,
It's hot up here. Probably where you are, too.
An air-conditioned theater is one reliable solution — except when Anika Noni Rose tears into the title role in "Carmen Jones." Same, too, it seems, at the refurbished Emerson Colonial Theater in Boston, where the "extravagantly entertaining" "Moulin Rouge! The Musical" thrilled our Ben Brantley.
I expect temperatures to rise when Bryan Cranston gets mad as hell in "Network" on Broadway. In the meantime, please take the time to read our fascinating conversation on how gay playgoers of different generations respond to "The Boys in the Band." Marvel, too, at how Stacy Keach gives new meaning to the tired old phrase "the show must go on."
Stay cool (thanks, Ed Sullivan). Consider joining us on August 17 for a music-filled live sneak preview of the fall arts season. And let me know how we're doing, and what else you'd like to read, at theaterfeedback@nytimes.com.
Have a great week, »
Scott Heller
Theater Editor
'The Boys in the Band' and a Generational Divide
The 2018 revival of
The 2018 revival of "The Boys in the Band" features an ensemble cast of gay men, including (from left) Andrew Rannells, Tuc Watkins, Jim Parsons, Robin De Jesus and Matt Bomer. Sara Krulwich/The New York Times
By STUART EMMRICH, WESLEY MORRIS, MATTHEW SCHNEIER AND ZACHARY WOOLFE
Four gay men who recently attended the Broadway revival of this 50-year-old play — three seeing it for the first time — debate its significance and relevance.
'Network,' Starring Bryan Cranston, Sets Broadway Opening
Bryan Cranston, at left and on screen, as Howard Beale in the National Theater production of
Bryan Cranston, at left and on screen, as Howard Beale in the National Theater production of "Network." Jan Versweyveld
By DAVE ITZKOFF
Mr. Cranston will reprise his role as the unraveling news anchor Howard Beale in this adaptation of Paddy Chayefsky's Academy Award-winning satire.

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Features and News
The Go-Go's taught a new generation the power of the girl gang. The band in 1981, from left: Kathy Valentine, Jane Wiedlin, Gina Schock, Charlotte Caffey and Belinda Carlisle.
Paul Natkin/Getty Images
By EVELYN MCDONNELL
The new wave band, whose music is being celebrated in a Broadway musical, provided a blueprint for girl-powered groups. But the Go-Go's weren't always taken seriously.
Anika Noni Rose on the World War II-era set of
Vincent Tullo for The New York Times
By JOSE SOLÍS
It has taken a while, but playing the sultry title role in "Carmen Jones" fulfills a lifelong dream.
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A brief (recent) history of plays, films and TV shows exploring the fraught, sometimes predatory relationship between directors and their charges.
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Even as many performers focus on psychological well-being in their work, the grueling annual event can take a toll.
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By A.J. GOLDMANN
It's an event more associated with classical music, but drama is in its DNA. Two productions of German-language classics at the festival show differing approaches.
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By ANDREW R. CHOW
Lynn Nottage's Pulitzer Prize-winning play about working class anxieties will be performed in 18 counties in the lead-up to the election.
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Critic's Pick: A Smashing 'Moulin Rouge!'
As Harold Zidler, who runs the Moulin Rouge nightclub, Danny Burstein delivers a master class in pandering seediness.
As Harold Zidler, who runs the Moulin Rouge nightclub, Danny Burstein delivers a master class in pandering seediness. Matthew Murphy
By BEN BRANTLEY
The movie that heralded the jukebox musical has been reinvented as a jukebox musical on its very own terms at the Emerson Colonial Theater in Boston.
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Political tensions and populist hostilities familiar to the American scene find their way to London stages, too, in "Imperium" and "The Jungle."
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By JESSE GREEN
With "The Tempest," "An Ideal Husband" and "To Kill a Mockingbird," the Stratford Festival carries on a conversation about purity and forgiveness.
Mike Birbiglia in
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By ALEXIS SOLOSKI
Mr. Birbiglia's solo show about becoming a father is at first excruciatingly funny and then just kind of excruciating.
Erin Cherry plays a dead woman who asks for help in locating her bones in Amina Henry's
Ed Forti
By ALEXIS SOLOSKI
Two lost souls (one literally back from the afterlife) meet in a gritty city park in Amina Henry's overstuffed but empathetic play.
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