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	<title>Observer &#187; It&#8217;s Miller Time </title>
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		<title>Observer &#187; It&#8217;s Miller Time </title>
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		<title>It&#8217;s Miller Time</title>

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		<pubDate>Wed, 27 Jan 2010 00:26:14 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2010/01/its-miller-time/</link>
			<dc:creator>Jesse Oxfeld</dc:creator>
				
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		<description><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/viewbridge132r.jpg?w=300&h=204" />It&rsquo;s a thankless task, being the father in an Arthur Miller play&mdash;always a failed salesman or a suicidal military-parts manufacturer. So, too, for Eddie, the paterfamilias uncle in<em> A View From the Bridge</em>, who has a hard job as a Brooklyn longshoreman, a devoted but nagging wife and a lovely young orphan niece who&rsquo;s growing into a woman and for whom he might have feelings that are more than avuncular.</p>
<p class="TEXT">The niece, Katie, lives with Eddie and his wife, Beatrice, in their tenement apartment in Red Hook. And, of course, the big draw in this current production of <em>A View From a Bridge, </em>which opened Sunday night at the Cort Theatre, is that movie star Scarlett Johansson is making her Broadway debut as Katie, opposite Liev Schreiber as Eddie. Their characters live in a constricted world, filled with other Italian longshoremen and their families, and a strong sense of how things should be. As the play starts, the Carbone home is a seemingly contented one&mdash;mother, father and niece-as-daughter living happily and lovingly. But it&rsquo;s quickly clear there&rsquo;s tension, too: Katie, in a post&ndash;high-school stenography school, has been given a job offer, and Eddie doesn&rsquo;t want her to take it. It&rsquo;s clear he can&rsquo;t allow himself to let her grow up.</p>
<p class="TEXT"><span style="letter-spacing: 0pt">That night, two &ldquo;submarines&rdquo; arrive, illegal immigrants. They&rsquo;re Beatrice&rsquo;s cousins, smuggled in from Italy. They&rsquo;ll live with the Carbones, and work with Eddie on the docks, and the <em>omerta</em> code of the neighborhood ensures that no one will report them to the Immigration Bureau. One is Marco, dark and solid, a central-casting longshoreman. His brother is Rodolpho, slighter and blond; he also sings and cooks. Katie falls for Rodolpho, and thus begins the tragedy. Eddie won&rsquo;t tolerate the match, her departure. He first tries to convince Katie that Rodolpho is only interested in her for citizenship; then he tries to convince her &ldquo;the guy ain&rsquo;t right,&rdquo; by which Eddie means that Rodolpho is gay; finally, without any other options, he reports the submarines to Immigration.</span></p>
<p class="TEXT"><span style="letter-spacing: 0pt">Mr. Schreiber, perhaps the most powerful and intense stage actor working today, is, as always, excellent; here, he gives Eddie a restrained physicality that hints throughout at the horrible ending to come. Ms. Johansson, in her first stage role, acquits herself well. She&rsquo;s too old for the part&mdash;she often seems more Beatrice&rsquo;s younger sister than her school-age niece&mdash;but in 1940s costume and with a Brooklyn accent, she effectively tones down her movie-star-ness to give a convincing performance as Katie, rather than a performance of Scarlett Johansson playing Katie. When she has her big final confrontation with Eddie, she can&rsquo;t quite hold her own against Mr. Schreiber&mdash;but then, not many can.</span></p>
<p class="TEXT">One who does is Corey Stoll, who plays Marco and effectively stands up to Eddie&mdash;and to Mr. Schreiber&mdash;in their final showdown. Jessica Hecht, as Beatrice, essentially reprises her performance as Blanche in the recent, ill-fated <em>Brighton Beach Memoirs</em>. Morgan Spector, as Rodolpho, is the weak link in the cast: Eddie&rsquo;s insistence on Rodolpho&rsquo;s homosexuality should be his own delusion, but Mr. Spector is a touch too fey, with a heart-shaped face that looks a little too much like Alan Cumming&rsquo;s, to make that clear.</p>
<p class="TEXT">As directed by Gregory Mosher, this <em>View From the Bridge </em>is intense, emotional, physical and moving. It&rsquo;s impressively economical&mdash;every line, movement, reaction exists only to build the tension to what Miller, in a foreword to the script, calls Eddie&rsquo;s inevitable &ldquo;catastrophe.&rdquo; The only times it slackens&mdash;and this is Miller&rsquo;s fault, not Mr. Mosher&rsquo;s&mdash;is when Mr. Alfieri, Eddie&rsquo;s lawyer, shows up to once more explain what&rsquo;s going on. It&rsquo;s unnecessary, and it takes you out of the story. It also prompts the question: When an attorney follows you around all day to explicate the implicit, does he charge an hourly fee or a retainer?</p>
<p class="CULTURE3linedrop">Across the East River, there&rsquo;s another bridge in town: the second season of the Bridge Project, the collaboration of BAM, London&rsquo;s Old Vic and Neal Street&mdash;the director Sam Mendes&rsquo; production company&mdash;to produce classical theater with a transatlantic flavor. Last year delivered excellent productions of Shakespeare&rsquo;s <em>Winter&rsquo;s Tale </em>and Chekhov&rsquo;s <em>Cherry Orchard</em>, along with some big names: The Chekhov was newly adapted by Tom Stoppard; the company included Ethan Hawke and Josh Hamilton and Simon Russell Beale and Richard Easton.</p>
<p class="TEXT">This year&rsquo;s edition pairs two Shakespeare plays: <em>As You Like It</em>, which opened at the BAM  Harvey Theater last week, and <em>The Tempest</em>, which will commence next month. The actors are less well known&mdash;Thomas Sadoski, as Touchstone in <em>As You Like It</em>, might be the most recognizable name to American theatergoers&mdash;but their performances, and the production, are no less good. <em>As You Like It</em> is a charming and romantic play&mdash;if also, like many of Shakespeare&rsquo;s comedies, somewhat ridiculously plotted&mdash;and it&rsquo;s a joy to watch the hijinks unfold, especially on Tom Piper&rsquo;s gorgeous, painterly Arden Forest set.</p>
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<p class="CULTURE3linedrop">It&rsquo;s been a tough few years for revivals of old three-act farces set in the spacious living rooms of self-absorbed theater people. First, last spring, came the dreadful <em>Accent on Youth</em>, from 1934, in which David Hyde Pierce played an aging playwright in love with his secretary. Then the fall brought <em>The Royal Family</em>, George S. Kaufman and Edna Ferber&rsquo;s 1927 sendup of the Barrymores, which required audiences to sit through three often-dull hours for the pleasures of its lovely second act.</p>
<p class="TEXT">But now, finally, there&rsquo;s No&euml;l Coward&rsquo;s 1939 <em>Present Laughter</em>, which opened in a funny, fresh and entirely entertaining revival at the Roundabout Theatre Company&rsquo;s American Airlines Theatre last week. It, too, has the requisite living-room set: a decadent Deco duplex with leather couches and a flowing stairway. But, much more important, it&rsquo;s got a script of witty Coward epigrams and a veteran and very funny cast&mdash;under the fleet direction of Nicholas Martin&mdash;to deliver them.</p>
<p class="TEXT">Victor Garber plays Garry Essendine, a role Coward wrote for himself, an over-the-top star of the London stage. He&rsquo;s delightfully entitled, hammy and petulant. Even better is Harriet Harris, who steals each scene she&rsquo;s in as his arch, droll secretary. Brooks Ashmanskas eventually grows a bit tiresome as an eccentric young playwright attempting to ingratiate himself with Essendine, a high-energy collection of nervous tics and prissy mannerisms. But his initial meeting with Harris&rsquo; secretary&mdash;a handshake face-off&mdash;is some of the best comedic acting I&rsquo;ve seen.</p>
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<p class="CULTURE3linedrop">Horton Foote&rsquo;s <em>Orphans&rsquo; Home Cycle</em> grew on me. It&rsquo;s the playwright&rsquo;s final work&mdash;a series of nine one-acts performed over three evenings, tracing the hard life of Horace Robedaux in the early part of the 20th century. I found the first part&mdash;in which young Horace loses his father and is abandoned by his mother and then goes to work for a drunken plantation owner&mdash;slow-paced and a touch tedious.</p>
<p class="TEXT">But, as my mother&mdash;a Foote fan whom I brought along to all three parts&mdash;kept telling me, it&rsquo;s like a good novel, and the pleasure is in getting to know the characters and becoming embedded in their world. Sure enough, in<span>&nbsp; </span>the second part, the accretion of detail&mdash;all those intertwined relatives and reminiscences in Foote&rsquo;s fictional Harrison, Texas&mdash;was drawing me in. By the third part, which opened last night at the Signature Theatre Company&rsquo;s Peter Norton Space, I was wrapped up in the story, suffering along with Horace through the 1918 flu pandemic, feeling his pain when his young daughter dies.</p>
<p class="TEXT"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">And yet. <em>Orphan&rsquo;s</em> has done well enough at the Signature&mdash;which devotes each season to one playwright, and where all tickets cost only $20, thanks to a grant from Time Warner&mdash;that there&rsquo;s serious talk of moving it to Broadway. I&rsquo;m no Broadway producer, but nine hours of sad stories, spread over three nights, at Broadway ticket prices, without any big names in the (admittedly excellent) cast, does not seem like a recipe for a hit.</span></p>
<p class="TAGLINE-BylineEmail"><em>joxfeld@observer.com</em></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/viewbridge132r.jpg?w=300&h=204" />It&rsquo;s a thankless task, being the father in an Arthur Miller play&mdash;always a failed salesman or a suicidal military-parts manufacturer. So, too, for Eddie, the paterfamilias uncle in<em> A View From the Bridge</em>, who has a hard job as a Brooklyn longshoreman, a devoted but nagging wife and a lovely young orphan niece who&rsquo;s growing into a woman and for whom he might have feelings that are more than avuncular.</p>
<p class="TEXT">The niece, Katie, lives with Eddie and his wife, Beatrice, in their tenement apartment in Red Hook. And, of course, the big draw in this current production of <em>A View From a Bridge, </em>which opened Sunday night at the Cort Theatre, is that movie star Scarlett Johansson is making her Broadway debut as Katie, opposite Liev Schreiber as Eddie. Their characters live in a constricted world, filled with other Italian longshoremen and their families, and a strong sense of how things should be. As the play starts, the Carbone home is a seemingly contented one&mdash;mother, father and niece-as-daughter living happily and lovingly. But it&rsquo;s quickly clear there&rsquo;s tension, too: Katie, in a post&ndash;high-school stenography school, has been given a job offer, and Eddie doesn&rsquo;t want her to take it. It&rsquo;s clear he can&rsquo;t allow himself to let her grow up.</p>
<p class="TEXT"><span style="letter-spacing: 0pt">That night, two &ldquo;submarines&rdquo; arrive, illegal immigrants. They&rsquo;re Beatrice&rsquo;s cousins, smuggled in from Italy. They&rsquo;ll live with the Carbones, and work with Eddie on the docks, and the <em>omerta</em> code of the neighborhood ensures that no one will report them to the Immigration Bureau. One is Marco, dark and solid, a central-casting longshoreman. His brother is Rodolpho, slighter and blond; he also sings and cooks. Katie falls for Rodolpho, and thus begins the tragedy. Eddie won&rsquo;t tolerate the match, her departure. He first tries to convince Katie that Rodolpho is only interested in her for citizenship; then he tries to convince her &ldquo;the guy ain&rsquo;t right,&rdquo; by which Eddie means that Rodolpho is gay; finally, without any other options, he reports the submarines to Immigration.</span></p>
<p class="TEXT"><span style="letter-spacing: 0pt">Mr. Schreiber, perhaps the most powerful and intense stage actor working today, is, as always, excellent; here, he gives Eddie a restrained physicality that hints throughout at the horrible ending to come. Ms. Johansson, in her first stage role, acquits herself well. She&rsquo;s too old for the part&mdash;she often seems more Beatrice&rsquo;s younger sister than her school-age niece&mdash;but in 1940s costume and with a Brooklyn accent, she effectively tones down her movie-star-ness to give a convincing performance as Katie, rather than a performance of Scarlett Johansson playing Katie. When she has her big final confrontation with Eddie, she can&rsquo;t quite hold her own against Mr. Schreiber&mdash;but then, not many can.</span></p>
<p class="TEXT">One who does is Corey Stoll, who plays Marco and effectively stands up to Eddie&mdash;and to Mr. Schreiber&mdash;in their final showdown. Jessica Hecht, as Beatrice, essentially reprises her performance as Blanche in the recent, ill-fated <em>Brighton Beach Memoirs</em>. Morgan Spector, as Rodolpho, is the weak link in the cast: Eddie&rsquo;s insistence on Rodolpho&rsquo;s homosexuality should be his own delusion, but Mr. Spector is a touch too fey, with a heart-shaped face that looks a little too much like Alan Cumming&rsquo;s, to make that clear.</p>
<p class="TEXT">As directed by Gregory Mosher, this <em>View From the Bridge </em>is intense, emotional, physical and moving. It&rsquo;s impressively economical&mdash;every line, movement, reaction exists only to build the tension to what Miller, in a foreword to the script, calls Eddie&rsquo;s inevitable &ldquo;catastrophe.&rdquo; The only times it slackens&mdash;and this is Miller&rsquo;s fault, not Mr. Mosher&rsquo;s&mdash;is when Mr. Alfieri, Eddie&rsquo;s lawyer, shows up to once more explain what&rsquo;s going on. It&rsquo;s unnecessary, and it takes you out of the story. It also prompts the question: When an attorney follows you around all day to explicate the implicit, does he charge an hourly fee or a retainer?</p>
<p class="CULTURE3linedrop">Across the East River, there&rsquo;s another bridge in town: the second season of the Bridge Project, the collaboration of BAM, London&rsquo;s Old Vic and Neal Street&mdash;the director Sam Mendes&rsquo; production company&mdash;to produce classical theater with a transatlantic flavor. Last year delivered excellent productions of Shakespeare&rsquo;s <em>Winter&rsquo;s Tale </em>and Chekhov&rsquo;s <em>Cherry Orchard</em>, along with some big names: The Chekhov was newly adapted by Tom Stoppard; the company included Ethan Hawke and Josh Hamilton and Simon Russell Beale and Richard Easton.</p>
<p class="TEXT">This year&rsquo;s edition pairs two Shakespeare plays: <em>As You Like It</em>, which opened at the BAM  Harvey Theater last week, and <em>The Tempest</em>, which will commence next month. The actors are less well known&mdash;Thomas Sadoski, as Touchstone in <em>As You Like It</em>, might be the most recognizable name to American theatergoers&mdash;but their performances, and the production, are no less good. <em>As You Like It</em> is a charming and romantic play&mdash;if also, like many of Shakespeare&rsquo;s comedies, somewhat ridiculously plotted&mdash;and it&rsquo;s a joy to watch the hijinks unfold, especially on Tom Piper&rsquo;s gorgeous, painterly Arden Forest set.</p>
<div>
<table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0">
<tbody>
<tr>
<td style="padding: 0in" align="left" valign="top">&nbsp;</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
<p class="CULTURE3linedrop">It&rsquo;s been a tough few years for revivals of old three-act farces set in the spacious living rooms of self-absorbed theater people. First, last spring, came the dreadful <em>Accent on Youth</em>, from 1934, in which David Hyde Pierce played an aging playwright in love with his secretary. Then the fall brought <em>The Royal Family</em>, George S. Kaufman and Edna Ferber&rsquo;s 1927 sendup of the Barrymores, which required audiences to sit through three often-dull hours for the pleasures of its lovely second act.</p>
<p class="TEXT">But now, finally, there&rsquo;s No&euml;l Coward&rsquo;s 1939 <em>Present Laughter</em>, which opened in a funny, fresh and entirely entertaining revival at the Roundabout Theatre Company&rsquo;s American Airlines Theatre last week. It, too, has the requisite living-room set: a decadent Deco duplex with leather couches and a flowing stairway. But, much more important, it&rsquo;s got a script of witty Coward epigrams and a veteran and very funny cast&mdash;under the fleet direction of Nicholas Martin&mdash;to deliver them.</p>
<p class="TEXT">Victor Garber plays Garry Essendine, a role Coward wrote for himself, an over-the-top star of the London stage. He&rsquo;s delightfully entitled, hammy and petulant. Even better is Harriet Harris, who steals each scene she&rsquo;s in as his arch, droll secretary. Brooks Ashmanskas eventually grows a bit tiresome as an eccentric young playwright attempting to ingratiate himself with Essendine, a high-energy collection of nervous tics and prissy mannerisms. But his initial meeting with Harris&rsquo; secretary&mdash;a handshake face-off&mdash;is some of the best comedic acting I&rsquo;ve seen.</p>
<div>
<table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0">
<tbody>
<tr>
<td style="padding: 0in" align="left" valign="top">&nbsp;</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
<p class="CULTURE3linedrop">Horton Foote&rsquo;s <em>Orphans&rsquo; Home Cycle</em> grew on me. It&rsquo;s the playwright&rsquo;s final work&mdash;a series of nine one-acts performed over three evenings, tracing the hard life of Horace Robedaux in the early part of the 20th century. I found the first part&mdash;in which young Horace loses his father and is abandoned by his mother and then goes to work for a drunken plantation owner&mdash;slow-paced and a touch tedious.</p>
<p class="TEXT">But, as my mother&mdash;a Foote fan whom I brought along to all three parts&mdash;kept telling me, it&rsquo;s like a good novel, and the pleasure is in getting to know the characters and becoming embedded in their world. Sure enough, in<span>&nbsp; </span>the second part, the accretion of detail&mdash;all those intertwined relatives and reminiscences in Foote&rsquo;s fictional Harrison, Texas&mdash;was drawing me in. By the third part, which opened last night at the Signature Theatre Company&rsquo;s Peter Norton Space, I was wrapped up in the story, suffering along with Horace through the 1918 flu pandemic, feeling his pain when his young daughter dies.</p>
<p class="TEXT"><span style="letter-spacing: -0.15pt">And yet. <em>Orphan&rsquo;s</em> has done well enough at the Signature&mdash;which devotes each season to one playwright, and where all tickets cost only $20, thanks to a grant from Time Warner&mdash;that there&rsquo;s serious talk of moving it to Broadway. I&rsquo;m no Broadway producer, but nine hours of sad stories, spread over three nights, at Broadway ticket prices, without any big names in the (admittedly excellent) cast, does not seem like a recipe for a hit.</span></p>
<p class="TAGLINE-BylineEmail"><em>joxfeld@observer.com</em></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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