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Photo by Don Kellogg
Showing posts with label James Rebhorn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label James Rebhorn. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Saturn Returns

I haven't been to the Mitzi Newhouse theatre at Lincoln Center in quite a while, but for my return I was pleasantly surprised by the new play, Saturn Returns, by Noah Haidle.

The show plays out as a trilogy of sorts.  It cleverly draws a parallel between life repeating and the theory of how the planet Saturn takes 30 years to orbit the sun.  So as the theory goes - Saturn returns to the same position it was when you were born about every 30 years and so does your life experience. 
In a brief 75 minutes (ironically not 90 minutes) three different actors poignantly portray Gustin at a different age - repeating, re-living, and returning to the same point each time. Robert Eli (28), John McMartin (88), and James Reborn (58) each play Gustin at the indicated age and weave together the sad story of his life.  Amazingly, Rosie Benton plays the 3 different women in his life at these same points - Suzanne, his nurse when he is 88, Zephyr, his daughter when he is 58, and Loretta, his wife w
hen he was 28.   

The dots are sadly connected one by one and the entire story is revealed scene by scene.  As the dialogue unfolds, and the men sweep back and forth thru time to unveil the sad tragedies of Gustin's life.   Enhancing the experience is the brilliantly placed music, eerie and foretelling.  The lighting is magnificent on the simple living room of a house in Grand Rapids, Michigan, unchanging from 1948 to 1978 to 2008.

Four brilliant actors - one classic stage - check this one out before it too meets with it's planned demise in January.

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Prelude to a Kiss

A charming, very intimate performance at the Roundabout. John Mahoney (Frasier's Dad), Annie Parisse (DA Borgia on Law and Order), and Alan Tudyk (shirt off and smokin' hot), charmed the audience in this Craig Lucas play.

In summary - it's the age old story of "Be careful what you wish for". The chemistry between Peter and Rita and the Old Man was remarkable. The lighting and sound and simple set ingeniously complemented and enhanced the words.

It was nice to sit and watch a straightforward play, good actors, and a charming story in a great theater!