home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME - Man of the Year
/
CompactPublishing-TimeMagazine-TimeManOfTheYear-Win31MSDOS.iso
/
moy
/
010692
/
0106410.000
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1992-08-28
|
5KB
|
119 lines
THEATER, Page 78BEST OF 1991
1. DANCING AT LUGHNASA (Broadway).
The best ensemble cast since Nicholas Nickleby, performing
the most elegant and rueful memory play since Broadway Bound,
if not The Glass Menagerie. In a weary and mutually tolerant
Irish family of five sisters and a brother, playwright Brian
Friel finds a whole world, pagan and Christian, ancient and
modern, savage and sedate. Through a lifetime of theatergoing,
one would be lucky to see acting any better than this.
2. LOST IN YONKERS (Broadway).
A superb tragicomedy in which Neil Simon unflinchingly
revisits the time in his childhood when he and his brother had
to live as humbled supplicants among richer relatives (an
episode more sentimentally imagined in his 1983 Brighton Beach
Memoirs). In Grandma Kurnitz (Irene Worth), Simon brilliantly
plumbs the sadistic soul of stoic, rugged individualism.
3. MISS SAIGON (Broadway).
Musical storytelling gets no better than this tragic tale
of lovers divided by the end of the Vietnam war and, more
deeply, by the economic gulf between the U.S. and the Third
World. As a Vietnamese hustler and would-be American, Britain's
Jonathan Pryce gave the performance of the year in a reprise of
his West End triumph.
4. THE SECRET GARDEN (Broadway).
Sweet and sentimental and, yes, a little slow, this
adaptation of a beloved children's book is gorgeous and
Freudianly evocative to look at, melodic and poignant to hear,
innocent and hugely satisfying in its emotional climax. The only
worthwhile American musical of 1991.
5. FORGIVING TYPHOID MARY (George Street Playhouse, New
Brunswick, N.J.).
This true story of the woman who unwittingly spread a
lethal epidemic lifted documentary into poetry. Mark St.
Germain's play, part fevered memory, part aborted repentance,
was hauntingly staged by artistic director Gregory S. Hurst on
a painterly landscape blending hospital confines with the lonely
beauty of the dunes. As Mary, Estelle Parsons blazed in denial.
6. UNIDENTIFIED HUMAN REMAINS AND THE TRUE NATURE OF LOVE
(off-Broadway).
An MTV drama -- quick, affectless riffs and crosscuts of
action in an ambisexual world of AIDS, serial killers and
arrestingly etched violence. Playwright Brad Fraser's theme was
the anomie that makes it easier to couple in the dark than to
voice one's feelings. His underlying mantra: "Everybody lies."
7. THE OLD BOY/THE SNOW BALL (off-Broadway/Huntington
Theater, Boston).
A.R. Gurney has moved from lacerating the Wasp world he
came from (The Dining Room, The Middle Ages) to exploring his
own guilts in this pair of pieces about the disquiets and
discontents of his generation. The Old Boy laments unthinking
bigotry toward homosexuals. The Snow Ball yearns for bygone male
authority and apparent female contentment with it.
8. WHEN WE DEAD AWAKEN (Harvard and Houston).
Ibsen might not have recognized his valedictory in Robert
Wilson's visually spectacular and verbally stripped-down
version. But this directorial coup of the year reinforced
Wilson's nonpareil standing as a sculptor of stage space.
9. FROM THE MISSISSIPPI DELTA (off-Broadway).
From prostitute to professor and playwright, from country
child to civil rights marcher to feminist, Endesha Ida Mae
Holland has lived a life remarkable in itself and symbolic of
half a century of astonishing U.S. social change. Her bluesy
memoir has been toured by a trio of women, equally deft at
folksy caricature and tragedy, who sing like the Liberty Bell.
10. FORTINBRAS (La Jolla Playhouse).
Lee Blessing's splendid musing on the most influential
play in the English language and on the tawdry modern
phenomenon of the mediagenic politician. From Shakespeare's
shaky dramaturgy to the meaning of life and afterlife, from the
enigma of TV to the hollowness of the man of action, a thrilling
welter of ideas, aphorisms, historical allusions and wry wit,
robustly staged by Des McAnuff and cunningly acted by Daniel
Jenkins.
THE PHONIEST FLAG WAVER
THE WILL ROGERS FOLLIES.
Take naked male buttocks and female breasts, a
rainbow-colored staircase that lights up, a nonplot full of
nonsense and nonjokes, an unseen Great Voice played by Gregory
Peck, rope tricks and a dog act. What have you got? A soggy echo
of The Ed Sullivan Show. Now mention the homeless to customers
who paid $60 a ticket and add a row of chorines waving flags in
the aftermath of a war. What have you got? A Tony Award. And a
pious fraud.