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| The cast of The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee. Credit: Joan Marcus |
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| Jason Kravitz and Lilli Cooper in The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee. Credit: Joan Marcus |
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| The cast of The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee. Credit: Joan Marcus |
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| The cast of The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee. Credit: Joan Marcus |
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| Jason Kravitz and Lilli Cooper in The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee. Credit: Joan Marcus |
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| The cast of The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee. Credit: Joan Marcus |
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| Amy Madigan as Aunt Gladys in Weapons. Credit: Warner Brothers |
Horror is a prevalent genre this year with Sinners (16 noms, the most ever), Weapons, and Bugonia prominently featured. Perhaps this is a metaphorical response to our national trauma. Jessie Plemmons' character is a victim of abuse in Bugonia as are the missing children in Weapons and the juke joint patrons in Sinners are victims of racism.
Oscar contenders seen:
Her extended profiles of prolific show-runners Kenya Barris (black-ish), Jenji Kohan (Weeds, Orange Is the New Black) and Ryan Murphy (Glee, Pose, Feud, etc.) offer a glimpse into the shifting power struggle in entertainment as these black, female and gay voices become more powerful. There are also views of the past with ruminations on Norman Lear, Joan Rivers, and Sex and the City.
Nussbaum recently was reassigned to cover theater for the New Yorker and I'm looking forward to her perspectives.
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| Oghenero Gbaje and Essence Lotus in Bowl EP, Obie Award winner for Best New Play. Credit: Carol Rosegg |
Originally presented by the Village Voice newspaper, the Obies are now presented by the American Theater Wing who also co-presents the Tonys. The Obies honor excellence in Off and Off-Off-Broadway theater. Instead of a ceremony, the Wing presents winners with cash grants totaling more than $250,000. A private reception for the winners will be held on Feb. 23.
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| David Greenspan in I'm Assuming You Know David Greenspan. Credit: Ahron R. Foster |
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| The company of Ulysses. Credit: Joan Marcus |
Is it even possible to stage such a work which relies so heavily on interior monologues and so little on plot in theatrical terms? Burgess Meredith directed an adaptation of the phantasmagoric Nightgown section (Bloom venturing into Dublin’s red-light district and his own imagination) Off-Broadway in 1958 starring Zero Mostel which was revived on Broadway in 1974. Here director John Collins and co-director Scott Shepherd are taking on the work as a whole, or at least an edited version. While some of the sections are bogged down in attempts to dramatize Joyce’s literary excesses and tend to drag, this adaptation does capture the vital energy of the author’s vivid characters, his deep themes of sexuality, religion and literature, and the emergence of Dublin itself as a life force.