theater

Gaines and Kathleen McNanny in An Enemy of the People. (Joan Marcus)

Brothers (Up) in Arms: A Trim, Healthy Enemy of the People Is a Strong Candidate This Election Season

Coming in an election year, when so many politicians polarize the electorate by confusing greed with moral good, the Manhattan Theater Club has picked a perfect time to revive Henrik Ibsen’s 1882 drama An Enemy of the People. Eschewing the most often used translation, by Arthur Miller, in favor of a new, trimmed-down version by Rebecca Lenkiewicz, the Broadway production at the Samuel J. Friedman Theatre addresses the dilemma of one man’s idealistic struggle to buck authority and expose the truth in the face of a powerful opposition that reaches mob force. The play resonates today because a lot of do-gooders with hearts in the right place are eventually beaten into submission, giving in to the majority, whereas Ibsen’s hero faces ruin rather than compromise. Directed with force by Doug Hughes, this intermission-less outing cuts huge chunks of exposition and debate from Ibsen’s talky text, shortening a sometimes tedious play to manageable length, along with cutting some of the acting roles, but without excising any important values. It also provides two valiant actors, Boyd Gaines and Richard Thomas, with the opportunity to own the stage instead of leasing it. They are marvelous.

A coastal town in Norway with a spa that serves as a lucrative tourist attraction is the setting for a play of contrasting ideas. Read More

movies

Norwegian Good! Norse Teen Star ‘Turns On’ Tribeca

Jannicke Systad Jacobsen, director of the just-concluded Tribeca Film Festival’s Norwegian teen drama Turn Me On, Goddammit!, was enjoying her time in New York–she happily showed The Observer an iPhone shot of herself and Robert DeNiro. Her willowy teenage star, Helene Bergsholm, was visiting New York for the first time. “I don’t wanna go home,” Read More

Wall Street

Morning Roundup: Probes for the Holidays

  • The Feds are wrapping up a three-year project aimed at cracking down on insider trading. Some of the biggest names in finance (Goldman Sachs, SAC, Janus) are being bandied about, as are the following phrases: Criminal and civil; three-year investigation; bankers; hedge funds; analysts. This should be a lot of fun to watch. Read More

Legal Matters

Citi Sued By Norway’s Central Bank

Getting sued by the Securities and Exchange Commission and domestic investors is sort of par for the course for America’s big banks these days, but gettings sued by a Scandinavian country, that’s really something special. Norway’s central bank has sued Citigroup, its CEO Vikram Pandit and chairman Richard Parsons because it suffered $835 million in Read More