Curtainup Founder & Editor Elyse Sommer's Epilogue -- I've passed the torch for reviewing and editing new theater productions on and off-Broadway and elsewhere. However, I'll continue to sound off here with my take on Live and Onscreen Entertainment. As for Curtainup's extensive content since 1996-- it's all sill available at www.curtainup.com

Saturday, May 18, 2024

Gallimaufry -- a Hodge Podge of Thoughts Prompted by Local, Global & Cultural Events

Gallimaufry -- a Hodge Podge of Thoughts Prompted by Local, Global & Cultural Events

By Elyse  Sommer

Friends with whom I maintain a steady email conversation often receive one from me with a subject heading of "This and That." The contents include a numbered list of topics to which the recipient can then respond. And so, by calling this missive Gallimaufry, I'm simply indulging in a linguistic borrowing from sixteenth-century French cooks who concocted a stew that contained a little of this and that.

I'm using this old-world title to gather some glad/sad thoughts and memories kicked up by life right  where I live and further afield. I'll start with what's closest -- my home territory. I'm fortunate to live in a neighborhood that remains a suburban-like oasis, with tree-lined streets convenient to restaurants,  grocery markets and quick transportation (subway, Long Island Railroad, buses) to NewYork's business and entertainment hub. Despite skyrocketing rents and purchase prices, young people continue to move here. What's more, instead of allowing the dire climate disasters and deplorable incidents of gun violence to discourage them, they courageously opt to raise families. Watching some of their "pandemic babies" become lively toddlers and getting to know them and their parents has socially enriched my daily walks and compensated somewhat for the social interaction that was integral to my previous busy life as Curtainup's editor and critic-in-chief.

Less upbeat and decidedly worrisome is the rise of authoritarian heads of state and the disastrous conflict in the Middle East. To ramp up these worries, that conflict has led to protests and an increase in antisemitism on local campuses and streets.

As for theatercentric happenings, I may be retired but I remain an armchair observer of the beat that  kept me super busy for a quarter century. Thus, below are comments on some happenings along the  area encompassing what's known as The Great White Way.

For starters, the practice of renaming theaters to honor notable practitioners of playwriting, directing  and performing continues, which also supports the bottom line and makes them more commercially  viable enterprises. Several theaters have been renamed since my retirement. But the most spectacular  new look on Broadway is the renovated Palace Theater. Eight years of work culminated in the entire  theater being raised 30 feet in the air. The airlifted venue will open with a concert by Ben Platt and   then followed by Tammy Faye, a new musical about the famous and also infamous preacher's wife. Katie Brayhen plays Tammy Faye and Andrew Rannells plays her spouse.

While I'd probably go to press previews of both the above, I would have had one of my musical  enthusiast backups do the reviews. On the other hand, two upcoming plays would top my see-and-  write-up list: Good Night, and Good Luck and The Mother.

I saw and liked the 2005 movie, Good Night, and Good Luck (the signature sign-off line of famed  newscaster Edward R. Murrow). The movie starred David Strathairn as Murrow and Georce Clooney as Fred Friendly. With Clooney scripting, directing and taking the lead, this stage adaptation would  certainly be on my list of must-see as well as write-about upcoming new plays.

Of course, I wouldn't miss anything by the great Paula Vogel -- not the revival of her Pulitzer-Prize-winning How I Learned to Drive when it was at the Samuel Friedman or her new play, The Mother,  which revisits the story about the brother whose loss she dramatized in The Baltimore Waltz before she  and its downtown cast became famous. The reviews of the new take at the Helen Hayes rejiggered one of my most memorable theater outings.

As always, and especially given that audiences are still hesitant to pay costlier-than-ever ticket prices   except for big-cast, sure-fire musicals, the remarkable solo play Prima Facie is having an unusual and  fascinating off-stage life. A recorded version of the show is being made available to judges who deal with sexual assault cases in Northern Ireland's courts. Bravo for harnessing the play for this valuable  function. 

Hopefully, the whole season, but especially the plays, on what would be the top of my must-see-and-  review list will be filmed so that I'll have a chance to watch on my home screen. No, it won't be the  same, but will give me a front-row view of the actors' faces and gestures. That view is only available   to people in the first five or six rows of a Broadway theater's top-priced orchestra seats.


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