GLENN LONEY'S ARTS RAMBLES
January, 2012
THIS
WAS THE MONTH THAT WAS…
So much for New Year's
Resolutions!
Your Roving Arts Reporter
resolved to write no more than a sentence or two
about the shows he sees--both On Stage & Off: in Museums &
Galleries--preferring, instead, to let Production Photos
& Images of Museum Quality Artworks & Objects
speak for themselves…
One Picture Is Worth
a Thousand Words!
As in: One Photo of
Newt Gingrich tells you everything you need to know about
The Speaker's potential as President of
the United States.
But, what can you do
when there are so many Theatre Productions that Astonish?
Frequently, however,
it's the Actors' Performances, not the plays, that command
Attention & Admiration!
Well, both Richard
III & Wit are--each in its own way--brilliantly
crafted Scripts…
That Christopher
Marlowe fellow could really write!
PASSING GLANCES
AT SCENES SEEN:
•Digital &
Design Wonders at Newly Recreated New York Historical Society!
Not only is the New
York Historical Society the oldest Museum in New York
City, it also possesses some of the most important & remarkable
Documents & Artifacts concerning the Life, History,
& Culture of both the City & the State.
Previous to its recent
astonishing & wonderful re invention--thanks to Digital
Technology & Ingenious Designers--much of this
invaluable Study Material was hidden away in Stacks
& Storage, available only On Call in its handsome
Library, with those stunning & history rich Stained
Glass Windows.
Now, when Native
New Yorkers or Eager Tourists enter the NYHS from its
Central Park West façade--where a bronze Statue
of Abraham Lincoln stands on the steps to greet them--they
will step into a Wonder World of actual Documents &
Artifacts, marvelously enhanced by Digitial Displays that
make even more Documents & Artifacts instantly available,
with fascinating explanations.
When you go--if you
have not already made an initial visit--look down at your Feet!
Beneath them you will often find an Illuminated Artifact Display,
sunk into the floor & lit by Con Edison!
The entire interior
wall, backing the façade, is now a riot of Historic
Busts, Artifacts, & Paintings, many of which could not
previously have been easily on display.
On the day of the Official
Press Preview, Your Arts Reporter had two other Press Previews
the same morning--why don't the City's Museums & Galleries
co ordinate these show dates?--so I was not able to check
out the fascinating new Children's Museum section, the
Second Floor survey of New York's long & complicated history,
the rejuvenated Library, or the Henry Luce Study Collection
up in the Attic.
Going downstairs to
the Children's window into New York History, you are guarded by
life sized images of famous or generic New Yorkers.
Once in the colorful
new facility, you will be both confronted & delighted by all
the Constructions that invite you--both Kids & Adults--to
savor Metropolitan Transit, NY Newspapers, Sports,
Voting, Schooling, Government, Dutch &
British Roots, Local Industries, & much, much more.
This is like a Disney
World version of New York's Past…
Up in the Luce Collection--Henry
Luce, the Time/LIFE heir, also funded similar Study
Collections at the Met Museum & the Brooklyn Museum--you can
find more Historic Fire Buckets, Drums, Hats, Flags, & Bugles
than could ever be shown downstairs.
There are also Silver,
Ceramics, Tools, Crafts, Statues, Busts, Inn Signs, Furniture,
Ship Models, Dolls, & Model Trains: the
List could be almost Endless…
Well worth a visit for
itself alone is the intriguing cinematic presentation in the Auditorium/Theatre.
As the New York Story unfolds, the screen & the film
become wider & wider!
True, there are almost
more Tourist Destinations in Manhattan--not to overlook
Brooklyn, Queens, Bronx, & Staten Island--than one could manage
in a decade of visits. But a morning's or an afternoon's Stop
Over at the New York Historical Society will prove richly
rewarding.
The NYHS makes the Museum
of the City of New York seem almost like an Annex on
Upper Fifth Avenue…
[Well, they never invite
Your Arts Reporter to their Press Previews, so I have No Idea
what they are up to.]
•Our Own Grandma
Moses Foremost among Outstanding Outsider Artists at Galerie St.
Etienne
The Galerie St. Etienne
[24 W. 57th St], while it specializes in German
& Austrian Expressionists--as does Ronald Lauder's
Upper Fifth Avenue Neue Galerie--also is an informed purveyor
of Outsider Art, also called Naïve, Self Taught,
or Art Brut.
In its current show,
The Ins & Outs of Self Taught Art, the naïve paintings
of Anna Mary Robertson are central. Better known as Grandma
Moses, she was effectually discovered by Otto Kallir,
founder of the Galerie St. Etienne.
To some, the Moses
Visions of Snow Clad New England Villages may look
rather like Hallmark Card Visuals. They may, in fact, have
been used as Greeting Card images: more fun than Currier &
Ives Home for Thanksgiving Nostalgia…
If you were thinking
of buying a Moses Original, you have to ask about
the price. Putting it on a card beside the painting might make
you faint.
So I asked.
"These are 140
& 170."
I somehow knew those
figures weren't $140 & $170.
No, indeed. How about
adding Three Zeroes?
Whenever there is a
new show at the Galerie, Jane Kallir writes an incisive
essay on its Artists or the
State of the Art Market
in general.
Her current & excellent
Report is titled: The Ins & Outs of Self Taught Art: Reflections
on a Shifting Field.
If you aren't able to
drop by the Galerie, to see the paintings & get your
own copy of Jane's invaluable explanations, you can read it on
line, as well as check out the Artists & their Images!
Not only Grandma Moses,
but also Henry Darger, John Kane, Michel Nedjar,
& Josef Karl Rädler.
•Rosemary Harris
Lives On The Road To Mecca, But Watch Out for Sudafrikaanse
Dominies!
Rosemary Harris
is radiant at the close of Athol Fugard's The
Road to Mecca--her character, Miss Helen, is
soon going to commit suicide, but that's not in the play…
Carla Gugino--who,
as her much younger friend, Elsa, who has driven 800 miles
from Cape Town, in response to an anguished letter from
Miss Helen--has an Epiphany as well.
It is good to see Jim
Dale back on a New York Stage--he's been absent too long,
recording Harry Potter Voices--as he brings a subtle, wistful
element to the role of the Boer Dominie who wants
to put the aged & agitated Helen into an Old Folks Home.
Could it be that this
Widowed Parson once loved Miss Helen?
Unfortunately for her,
all her Neighbors hate the Grotesque Figures with which
she has filled her front yard. They want them & Miss
Helen gone…
Oddly enough--now that
both Miss Helen & her Neighbors are all gone--the amazing
Mermaids & other odd figures she created out of cement
& wire are the only reason Tourists now flock to Karoo.
Including Your Arts
Reporter, who made a special trip to see them. Not long after
he had been mugged at High Noon on the High Street of Cape
Town, on his very first day in Apartheid Free South
Africa.
The late, great Newsweek
Drama Critic, Jack Kroll, was an avid admirer of the plays
of Athol Fugard, a crush I did not share, although we bonded
over mutual admiration for the novels of Edith Wharton.
My view was that American
Liberals fought Apartheid by not eating Outspan
Oranges & by raving about Fugard's torpid plays.
"Jack! When Apartheid
is over at last, Athol Fugard will have lost his Big Topic!"
That largely proved
to be true, but his Post Apartheid The Captain's Tiger--young
Fugard on a tramp ship in the Indian Ocean--was something Special.
Gordon Edelstein
staged, in Michael Yeargan's haunted setting.
•George Washington
Crosses the Delware Once Again in Met's New American Wing!
"Sit down, General!
You're rocking the boat!"
In the choppy winter
waters of the Delaware River, George Washington would never
have made it across to Battle the British, had he been
monumentally poised, standing up in front of that small boat for
his Picture Moment…
But Emanuel Leutze
knew what he was doing when he painted Washington Crossing
the Delaware, now newly restored & installed in the Place
of Honor in the newly renovated & enhanced American
Wing of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
The entire Second
Floor is bulging & surging--blindingly white--with 26
Chambers of American Art & History: Sculpture,
Furniture, Paintings, Inn Signs, Symbols, Flags…
In the Chamber of The
American West [1860 1920] there are more Frederick Remington
bronzes than you may have thought possible.
But there's an entire
room of John Singleton Copley, while Winslow Homer
& Thomas Eakins have to share a room. If not a bed…
For Feminists,
there's the Images of Women Gallery! Oddly enough, African
Americans don't have their very own Room, but the Civil
War Era does fill in some parts of that Narrative.
Then there are those
fascinating Period Rooms! People actually slept
in beds like that?
There are also some
intriguing Period Rooms on the first floor, along with the current
Duncan Phyfe show & that impressive Frank Lloyd
Wright Room, saved from destruction.
Down under is another
Treasure: the John Vanderlyn Panorama of Versailles
& its Formal Gardens.
In the 19th
Century, Panoramas were a very popular form of Entertainment
& Education. You could travel abroad, without the expense
& difficulty of Passports, Boarding Passes, & Customs
Inspections. Not to mention finding a Decent Hotel…
Viewing Vanderlyn's
Versailles, you would have mounted some stairs into a Painted
Surround that would put you in the very Center of the
Gardens, looking all around you at the Immense Façade of
he Palace & the Trees, Fountains, & Flowers.
Unfortunately at the
Met, the Panorama had to be installed in an oval space, with doors
at each oval apex. The Original would not have been so
pierced.
Most Panoramas were
lit from above, as often as possible with Natural Light.
There are some still surviving in Europe that have been either
preserved or restored as they once were, two centuries ago.
Some take you to a Celebrated
Building or Scene, but some help you relive a Great Battle
or an Historic Signing.
In Cairo, there's
an impressive Panorama which celebrates the Victory
of the Egyptian Forces over the Israelis. That
one was very short lived…
•On Auction at
Christie's: Fugitive Treasures from the American Wing?
Strolling through Christie's
Auction Rooms the day after visiting the Met's American Wing,
Your Arts Reporter was amazed to find Historic Paintings, Sculptures,
Grandfather Clocks, & Furniture that looked like Overflow
from the Met.
If you are already a
New Yorker, or a Tourist, a visit to Christie's--when an Auction
is forthcoming: otherwise, there may be little on view--is always
an inexpensive way to imagine being either a Major Collector
or a Met Curator!
Nonetheless, you could
not have competed with the "Private Collector" who bid $3.4
Million for a rare John Townsend Chippendale Document
Cabinet…
Also on view were the
great volumes of John James Audubon's Birds of
America that once belonged to the Duke of Portland.
[Not that City in Oregon: The Portland Dukes were Cavendishes!]
The Plates--435
of them, hand colored engravings, on double elephant folios--were
preserved in four handsome volumes
Even the specially constructed
Slip Case for these immense books of Colored Plates
stood tall: three feet at least …
In the Auction Event,
the Volumes & the Case sold for a Record Breaking 7.9
Million Dollars!
So, even in these times
of Receding Recession, someone has Geld enough to
buy some Old Books…
Christie's is
located in the Heart of Rock Center, at 20 Rockefeller
Plaza--49th Street, between Fifth & Sixth Avenues.
Contact: www.christies.com.
•Free Ai Wei
Wei in Bregenz Last Summer, But Now He's On Display
Near Frank Ghery…
Way out on West 19th
Street--almost on the West Side Highway, near the High
Rise, across from Chelsea Piers, & around the corner
from Frank Ghery's Barry Diller Fantasy Office
Bldg--Communist China's Foremost Artist, Ai
Wei Wei, had some artworks on display at the Chambers Gallery.
Your Roving Arts Reporter
took his Red--The East Is Red!--Free Ai Wei
Wei Bag, from Kunsthaus Bregenz, where,
last summer, that Slogan was up in lights atop the Glass
House Art Museum, looking out toward Lake Constance.
The Gallerist
informed me that they'd had the same Red Bag in Berlin,
where a gaggle of Ai Wei Wei Admirers had posed
for a Group Photo, brandishing their Bags.
On View was Ai Wei
Wei's rather uninspiring screen of Appearances of Crosses,
along with works by other Chinese Artists.
My favorite was Ding
Yi's Morning in Shanghai, painted in bold oranges,
yellows, & browns on Corrugated Cardboard, with very
large corrugations.
Ai Wei Wei's
Sunflower Seeds are also on view elsewhere in Manhattan. These
are actually Ceramic Sunflower Seeds! Ai Wei Wei
doesn't make them himself, of course.
Like Jeff Koons,
he hires professional Crafts People--or Artisans--to
make Actual his Visions & Imaginings.
What makes these Identical
Seeds special is the form or shape of
the Container in which he chooses to display them…
•Shuffling Through
The Picture Box Yields Nostalgia, But Not Powerful Plot
Inspirations.
Well, OK, looking at
old Family Photos stashed away in The Picture
Box can provoke a certain amount of Nostalgia. If you
can still recognize who those people are. Or were…
But it hasn't provided
Playwright Cate Ryan with much real substance for
her play about a Black Family having to sell their lovely Florida
Home to an obvious White Racist [Malachy Cleary],
who also has Issues with his aggrieved wife [Marisa
Redanty].
Nonetheless, it's good
to see the Negro Ensemble Company producing again, even
if they are a Long Way Off from Big Daddy, Douglas Turner
Ward & his Co Founder, Bobby Hooks.
Also: great to see Arthur
French & Elain Graham on stage once again, although
their roles do not do their talents justice.
Charles Weldon
staged, with the Picture Box central…
•Sparse Pickings
in Contemporary Art at Phillips de Pury: Haring, Rauschenberg,
etc.
Unlike many Auctions
at Phillips de Pury [450 Park Avenue] there weren't so
many Important Works on display recently.
But you might have bid
on a Keith Haring Pop Shop Quad, estimated between
$7,000 & $9,000.
Or you could have had
an Andy Warhol silk screen of a Benevolent Bovine,
titled Cow.
Also on offer: Damien
Hirst--the richest Con Artist in History, Roy Lichtenstein,
John
Baldessari, Tom
Otterness, & Tom Wesselman…
•At Stanford,
Be Careful With Whom You Room: Outside People May Prove
a Problem!
In Zayd Dorhn's
new drama of Life in the Fast Lane in Modern Beijing, a
Fast Talking Young Chinese Macher [Nelson
Lee] is thanking his former Stanford Roommate, Malcolm
[Matt Dellapina], for looking out for him on Campus
& in Palo Alto by setting him up with both a Job
& a Mistress [Xiao Mei].
They fall in love, or
at least Malcolm does. She wants to get out of China & into
America.
Malcolm is an insecure
Jewish Nerd, so, when his friend warns him off, he takes
off for Hoboken, leaving her stranded & forlorn, with
her Visa ed Passport & a nice new Traveling Outfit.
Naïve Chinese
Farmers & their children--who are either forced off their
Tenant Acres or hope for Better Things in the Big
City--need to beware of Smart Guys who promise to find
a place for them in Beijing, Shanghai, or Hong Kong…
Evan Cabnet directed
this handsomely designed production at the Vineyard, for
Naked Angels.
•Stage Stars'
Fashionable Costumes & Hats Excited the Matinée Ladies:
Play Pictorial at Bard.
Time was when the Matinée
Ladies were almost more interested in the Fashions
they saw on stage than they were in their Favorite Female Stars.
This was the case on
both sides of the Atlantic, both in London & in New
York.
In fact, such popular
theatre magazines as The Dramatic Mirror, Play Pictorial,
or The Stage always included pages on new fashions in Gowns,
Shoes, & Hats, as well as other Accessories.
Your Arts Reporter acquired
a complete run of Play Pictorial, ending in the early 1930s,
when Fashion Consciousness seemed to have waned.
Or the International Depression dampened interest in buying
Trendy Clothing.
Play Pictorial
was a Monthly that was made up of the Lobby Programs of
major West End Plays & Musicals. But each Program
had a section on Ladies' Fashions.
Now, at the Bard Grad
School Gallery, Michelle Majer has built upon her work
with a student seminar to document this Fascination with Fashion.
But she has done this
only by focusing on the careers of three once famous Ladies of
the Stage: Jane Hading, Lily Elsie,
& Billie Burke.
This is a small scale
show, so there probably wouldn't have been room to include such
other Stage Luminaries as the beloved Maude Adams,
everyone's Peter Pan.
Titled Staging Fashion,
1880 1920, the show includes photos, texts, & programs,
plus actual fashions & accessories to make that Vanished World
come to life.
Who now remembers Hading
or Elsie?
The beautiful &
glamorous Billie Burke--who famously married Follies Impresario
Flo Ziegfeld--is surely remembered, at least by Judy
Garland Fans, as Glenda the Good in The Wizard of
Oz…
This show closes 8 April
2012 & the Bard Gallery is at 18 West 86th Street.
Phone: 212 501 3078. Also: www.bgc.bard.edu.
•Dropping by Bonhams'
To Check on Forthcoming Auction Treasures…
Not only does Bonham's--founded
1793, in London--have Auction Rooms in Hong Kong, France,
& Monaco, it is also the only Major Auction house with
Salesrooms on both Coasts of the United States!
Some time ago, it digested
the West Coast's Butterfield's into its System, so you
can bid for Good Stuff in both SF & LA.
In mid January, Bonham's
offered at auction in Manhattan "Fine American & European
Furniture & Decorative Arts."
As at the Christie's
sale, some of these pieces would not have been out of place in
the Met's New American Wing Galleries.
The next day, Maritime
Paintings & more Decorative Arts went on the auction block.
It's curious how many of these Ship Portraits seem to be
on the market now.
Not only Schooners
& Clipper Ships, but also the occasional River Boat!
Even impressive Ocean Liners.
If you can't afford
to maintain a Yacht, you might be able to have a handsome
painting of one. Just dust the picture rail occasionally…
Also in January, Bonham's
auctioned off some gleaming Motorcycles in Las Vegas,
with some stunning Motorcars offered a few days later in
Scottsdale, AZ.
•Close Up Space:
Literary Editor & English Prof from Hell: Bad Dad's Daughter
Speaks Russian…
If you are a Best
Selling Author--writing for what is often mis called a Popular
Audience--you certainly do not want Paul [David
Hyde Pierce] editing your latest Manuscript.
["You wiped your pencil
all over my paper!"]
For Vanessa Finn
Adams [Rosie Perez], his niggling corrections
are both annoying & unnecessary.
He is also so remote
that he doesn't seem to see that she could like him. If he gave
her a chance…
He is--as imagined by
Dramatist Molly Smith Metzler--a fuss budget, sour puss,
old fuddy duddy, who thinks Editing is all about Commas,
Semi Colons, & Colons.
What he really needs
is a High Colonic…
Not only is he obtuse
to the Point of Rudeness with others, he has also seriously neglected
his bright young daughter Harper [Colby Minifie],
whom he thinks of as Unmanageable.
But they are both grieving
for the loss of a Wife & a Mother, neither handling things
very well.
Harper not only chooses
to speak only Russian to her Dad, but she also Trashes
his Office, leaving an Empty Space to Close Up.
The play's title, Close
Up Space, suggests not only a gap in the middle of a word,
but also a gap in Fatherly Feeling…
Michael Chernus
is amusing as a Hippie Left Over who seems to be Paul's
Factotum & Part time Conscience.
•Rembrandt &
Friends at the Morgan: Bold Strokes in Vivid Centuries Old Inks!
Some old Manuscripts,
Drawings, & even early Printed Books have deteriorated
not because they were left out in the sun or otherwise abused.
No, the acids in the Antique Inks used to
create them have eaten through the paper on which they were written,
drawn, or printed.
That's certainly not
a problem with the powerful & occasionally placid views of
Lowlands Life in the Dutch Golden Age that are now
on view at the Morgan Library & Museum.
These are priceless
sketches & drawings from the Clement C. Moore Collection,
assembled only over the last two decades & show together for
the first time in a public exhibition.
But there are not only
Dutch Windmills & ramshackle Farm Buildings,
but also impressive visions of Scenes & Characters from the
Bible. Not to overlook some charming drawings of animals
& birds…
Rembrandt certainly
had a bold & forceful hand when he was capturing a vision
in his head. If there were harmful acids in his vivid brown inks,
they haven't damaged the hand made paper.
At the Morgan, the show
is called Rembrandt's World, so it also features impressive
works by his students, friends, & colleagues: Ferdinand
Bol, Abraham Bloemaert, Jan van Goyen, &
Aelbert Cuyp.
There are still lots
of Windmills in Holland, but they aren't quite so quaint
as a few now on view. This interesting exploration of a Vanished
Age--some ninety drawings!--will close on 29
April 2012.
•Weegee Lenses
Murder + Historic Magnum Contact Sheets at International Photography
Show.
Sprays of Water
are gushing up from Manhattan Fire Trucks onto the flaming
Seventh Story of an old office building, with Water Proofed
Firemen on each floor level of the Fire Escapes.
But what makes this
WeeGee Tabloid Photo of yet another New York City
Disaster especially Ironic--even Schadenfreudally
Amusing--is the large sign just below the fire area: SIMPLY
ADD BOILING WATER…
Working the Night
Beat, covering Murders, Car Crashes, Police Round ups,
Tenement Fires--WeeGee made a name for himself, during the
Depression Years & World War II, with his on
the spot black & white photos of Epic Accidents, Spontaneous
Disasters, Human Misery & Deliberate Depravity.
WeeGee: Murder Is
My Business--just one of the new shows at the International
Center of Photography--draws upon the impressive WeeGee Archives
preserved at the ICP.
Not only are there the
Actual Photos, but also the Tabloid Front Pages,
featuring WeeGee's Lens Scoops. Plus Period Magazines &
Film clips.
The ICP Curators have
even re created part of WeeGee's Studio. As well as his
Photo League 1941 photo show: Murder Is My Business.
For those who--like
Your Roving Arts Reporter--can remember those daring days of Yesteryear
when the House Un American Activities Committee [HUAC]
& Senator Joseph McCarthy were fighting The
Red Menace, you will immediately realize that WeeGee
may have been a "Fellow Traveler," for not only was he involved
with the Commie Tainted Photo League, but he also was the
most famed photographer for the ill fated Liberal Newspaper, PM.
It came out in the PM, not in the AM…
If you want to walk
in WeeGee's Footsteps, there are even some ICP Walking
Tours: Times Square, The Bowery, Chinatown, Lower
Manhattan, & The Lower East Side.
No tours of the Upper
East Side. Not WeeGee's Beat…
You've surely heard
of the Magnum Opus, or Great Work?
Well, Magnum,
that world famed group of Famous Photographers--has just
issued a Great & Heavy Book: Magnum Contact Sheets.
Not only are heavy copies
of that book on display at ICP, but so are some of the Historically
Important Contact Sheets made of Major Events from
the Depression Years into the Present!
Curator Kristin Lubben
has not only edited the new Book--a Keeper, for
sure, now that Print Photos & very soon, Print Books,
are Dead in the Water, thanks to Digital Photography--she
has also mounted this impressive exhibition, choosing a selection
of the book's 139 Contact Sheets.
Also on View: Grey
Villet's photos for a LIFE magazine feature
on the legally banned Inter Racial Marriage of Richard
& Mildred Loving. They were aptly named, as is
the show: The Loving Story.
They took their Battle
all the way to the US Supreme Court, which overturned all
State Statutes forbidding Misegenation!
Perspectives 2012
features new work by Chien Chi Chang, Greg Girard,
& Anna Shteynshleyger.
[This unusual spelling
could be transliterated as Steinschlager, which could mean
a worker in a Rock Quarry or a Sculptor preparing
a Stone Block for finer things…]
•Armory's Winter
Antiques Show Echoes Met Museum's American Wing Treasures.
Not only could you have
bought some Museum Quality Americana at Christie's
this past month, you could also have done that at the annual Winter
Antiques Show at the Park Avenue Armory!
With the added advantage
of not having to bid against one of those One Percenters
who can afford to keep pushing the Final Sale Price up
into the Stratosphere: $7.9 Million for four books
of Audubon Plates?
Of course, many of the
Galleries with Booths in the show do not limit themselves to American
Arts &
Crafts. Pace
Primitive specializes in African & Oceanic Arts:
How about a Yoruba Mask? Or some Ibeji Twins?
One of Your Art Reporter's
favorites in the show was "Willie" Howard's Pictographic
Plantation Desk. At least it's attributed to Howard,
who was a Slave on Kirkwood Plantation in Mississippi.
Its front fold down
desk writing panel is decorated with Scissors & other
objects from Howard's life on the Plantation.
Galleries represented
were not from the New York Area alone: Other States were present
as well, not to overlook some important European Galleries.
Aronson of Amsterdam
seized my attention with its Dutch Delftware Cows.
These smiling, flower
spattered Bovines are small but charming. They also date
from the Mid 18th Century, so there aren't too
many of them around anymore.
Their Floral Decorations
recall those put round the necks of the Sacrificial Bull
or Cow in the annual Butcher's Guild Parade, in
Honor of St. Luke, the Butchers' Patron Saint.
After the Parade, the
Butchers got to eat the meat. Not all of it: some went
to the Church & to the Poor of Delft.
[Your Roving Arts Reporter
once had Cousins in Delft--Dordrecht, as well--but
never saw Flower Laden Bulls or any of these wonderful
small ceramics there.]
If you missed out on
the Duke of Portland's Audubon Folios at Christie's, you
could have bought one or all of the 12 Audubon Birds of America
on offer from Arader Galleries.
If Pennsylvania Rifles
are your Passion, you could have acquired one or more from
Joe Kindig Antiques. People don't shoot those Rifles
the way they used to…
At the Moderne Gallery,
you might have purchased George Nakashima's Conoid
End Table. As Editor Founder of The Art Deco News &
its successor, The Modernist, I have a weakness for Moderne.
Years ago, I could have
bought a table from George Nakashima, as my Cousin, Theron Zimmerman,
was Pastor of the Moravian Church in Doylestown
& we'd go over to George's Studio near New Hope, when
I drove down from Manhattan.
George would have given
me a Special Price, but I had no room for more furniture
in a tiny Brooklyn Heights apartment
But I once did buy an
18th Century French Desk that wasn't fine enough
for the Winter Antiques Show. It has an iron band on one
fractured leg, as well as a crack across its surface.
Apparently, when Heirless
Trustees of the East Side Settlement House--which is
the beneficiary of the WAS--passed on, their no
longer needed Historic Furniture, Carpets, Silver, Crystal,
China, Documents, & Objects d'Art used to
go into storage up in the Bronx, to await the next Armory
Sale.
A Daughter of The
American Revolution & a Christian Scientist, as
well, told me I could drive my Blue Beetle VW up to the
Storage Facility & buy the Damaged Desk for only $300.
The Reason? Her
daughter, Jill, had married a former Overseas Student of
mine, Phil, who was running the long gone Marboro Bookstore
on Eighth Street down in Greenwich Village.
They loved the desk,
but they Had No Money. So I would buy it for them: when
they had saved up $300, they'd pay me for it.
Unfortunately, before
that could happen, Phil deserted Jill for an Older Woman,
who already had kids of her own…
Oh, up in the Bronx
at the Storage place, I was able to buy for only a dollar each
Documents signed by Queen Victoria & Abraham
Lincoln.
These I gave to the
now defunct American Victorian Museum in Nevada City,
California. I have no Idea of who has them now…
•Kevin Spacey
Astonishes in Richard III at BAM: A Bum Back & a Bum
Leg Don't Deter Him…
Kevin Spacey!
Are you ready to receive your Tony© as Best Actor
this season?
Even though you are
all the way across the East River at the Brooklyn Academy
of Music?
Not on Broadway…
As with so many recent
Shakespeare Stagings, Director Sam Mendes has chosen to
make Richard III Contemporary. Perhaps echoing Ralph
Fiennes' Coriolanus?
History tells us--or
was it specifically Holinshead's Chronicles?--that it was
Fatal to be related to the Duke of Gloucester, called
Richard Crookback.
[Actually, Richard was
born in Scarborough, which is a Long Way Off from Gloucestershire…]
This is a Supercharged
Production, with Spacey a Human Dynamo, challenging
the rest of the Cast to match his Energy Levels.
The swift moving events
are immensely aided by Tom Piper's spare forced
perspective setting, with Catherine Zuber's costumes
also elegantly Lean & Mean.
There is an Outstanding
Cast, including Maureen Anderman as Duchess of York, Haydn
Gwynne as the distraught Queen Elizabeth, & Gemma Jones
as the Ghostly Figure of the Curse Flinging Queen Margaret.
This splendid production
comes to BAM from London's historic Old Vic, for which
Kevin Spacey took responsibility when no Brit with Managerial
Talents could make it work anymore.
Spacey is rather like
those magnificent Actor Managers who once dominated the
British Stage.
David Garrick,
anyone!
•
Master Scroll
Painter Fu Baoshi Survives Two Revolutions:
Down with Pu Yi,
Down with Chiang Kai shek, Onward with Chairman Mao & Cultural
Revolution!
Considering how savagely
Chinese Scholars & Intellectuals were treated--especially
by the Red Guards--during Chairman Mao's
so called Cultural Revolution, it is remarkable that the
honored artist Fu Baoshi was not only able to continue
painting those traditional brushwork Scrolls of Soaring
Chinese Mountains
in the mists of morn & Masses of Water falling great
distances, while also becoming one of Mao Zedong's
favorite artists.
That he was frequently
inspired by the Poems of Chairman Mao & the ancient
Glories of the almost mythical Chinese Landscape certainly were
in his favor.
He also learned to infuse
his scenes with blushes of Red, or even the occasional
Red Flag, certainly echoing Mao's Diktat: The
East is Red!
So adept was he that
he was selected to paint the great Landscape Panorama for
the Great Hall of the People in Beijing: Such
is the Beauty of our Rivers & Mountains.
Although Soviet Realism
was also invoked under Mao, Fu Baoshi never had to follow this
unrewarding Socialist Path.
What he did do--to fuel
his inspiration--was to paint while inebriated!
Fu Baoshi was born under
the brief reign of the Last Emperor, Pu Yi. He grew
up in the Chinese Republic of Chaing Kai Shek.
He survived the Japanese
Invasion & Occupation, which ended only in 1945.
Then came The Long
March, followed by The Great Leap Forward…
Although Fu Baoshi is
little known abroad, he is almost revered in Modern China.
The new show at the
Met Museum [closing 15 April 2012] includes some 70 paintings
& 20 seals that have never before been seen outside China.
This exhibition also
features the Draft he made for that Great Hall Panorama!
[It's worth noting the
rapid increase in exhibitions featuring Modern Chinese Artists,
some of whom are a Long Way Off from Socialist Realism or even
Naturalism.
[Ai Wei Wei seems
to be Everywhere, but many other names are now earning
attention.]
•Outsider Art
& Effortful Amateurs at Metropolitan Pavilion: How About Tramp
Art?
Not only was Outsider
Art eminently on view at the recent NYC Metro Show,
but there were also Paintings & Sculptures & Artifacts
that would not have been out of place in the Met Museum's new
American Wing Galleries.
January seems to have
been The Month of Americana, both for Outsiders &
Insiders.
In addition to the often
fascinating Works & Wares on display in the many booths,
there were also talks about Artists, Subjects, &
Styles.
Jane Kallir,
of Galerie St. Etienne, discussed Collecting Works by
Self Taught Artists. If you missed this--or any of the other
talks--you can read them all on line at metroshownyc.com.
Even more trendy are
those Pixilated black & white Squares in the Show Catalogue
that enable your QR Reader on your Smart Phone to
summon all them up for you…
Your Roving Arts Reporter
stopped by a number of Booths featuring arresting Objects, so
I ended up with a fistful of Gallery Cards.
Steven S. Powers
features Snuffboxes, as well as Native American & Colonial
Folk Art. Gemini Antiques has some great pressed tin Toys
& cast iron Banks.
Here's a card from Bill
Siegal's Santa Fé gallery. There's one from the
Cavin Morris Gallery…
This ModVic Steampunk
Design card must be from those folks who have all those Trendy
Skateboards, with the stunning designs.
Not for the first time
have I been delightfully taken aback by the intricacies
& complexities of what is called Tramp Art.
These richly chocolately
hued Frames, Clocks, & Boxes--built up
from tiny notch carved segments of Cigar Box or
Packing Crate woods--are remarkable artworks, almost Altars,
in their Originality.
I stopped to chat with
Clifford A. Wallach, at his Tramp Art crammed booth--where
he was happy to sign copies of his new book, A Legacy in Tramp
Art.
I told him that, during
The Great Depression, my Uncle John Hughes came
out from Jobless Ohio to sponge off the Relatives for weeks
& months. When he finished a box of smelly Cigars, he'd carve
a Brooch for some Cousin or Auntie.
John wasn't really a
Tramp. He was Family…
Wallach agreed that
Itinerant Artist might be a more accurate moniker
for these Artists of Cigar Box Segments. They came,
they smoked, they carved, & then, they Moved
On.
These odd creations,
Wallach suggests, are like "Men's Quilt Making."
THE MUSEUM OF EVERYTHING
seems to be Everywhere: not only at the Metro Pavilion.
Check it out at www.musevery.com.
•Outsider Art
& Self Taught Artists at the Outsider Art Fair down on West
34!
This annual Sanford
Smith organized show used to be on view down in the Puck
Building, just below Houston.
The Space was
terrible, so it's been moved to a Modern, Non Landmarked Building
on West 34th that's crammed with Design Shops
& Galleries for the Trade.
The 2012 Edition--the
20th Anniversary--of this always intriguing
show featured many of the same Galleries that have shown in the
Past.
Even some of the more
outstanding or outrageous Paintings & Constructions
look very much like those shown last year & before…
Here are some of the
Galleries with really interesting works on offer: Lindsay Gallery,
Marion Harris, Galerie Bonheur, Grey Carter, Andrew Edlin,
Tanner Hill, Red Truck, Packer Schopf, & Make Skateboards!
Your Roving Arts Reporter
made some Digital INFOTOGRAPHY™ shots for this Report.
So, instead of using
words to describe the most amazing of the works on sale,
how about some Digitals?
Not quite the same as
Digitalis…
New this year was Lausanne's
Collection de l'Art Brut. Great Posters!
[Lausanne was where
my Passport was stolen some ten years ago, but I don't
blame Brut Artists…]
Outsider Art seemed
to be Everywhere in Manhattan this January. Even out on
the Piers!
•Roy Arias Sponsors
International Theatre Fest, But Match Doesn't Strike a
Light…
Off off Broadway--actually
on West 43rd Street, across from 2econd Stage--Producer
Roy Arias has, this season, launched what he is pleased
to call: The First Times Square International Theatre Festival.
[In Journalism 1
A at UC/Berkeley, we were taught that you never
call anything The First, as you do not know, at that time,
if there will ever be a Second, but do give Arias credit
for hoping…]
There were some 16 productions
from which one could choose. Some Native [not Amer Ind,
but domestic] & some from Abroad, including
The Ukraine, Spain--where the Rain falls
mainly on the Plain, & Cuba.
Your Arts Reporter witnessed
a show called Match. This was confected by László
Kocsis, a Hungarian now working in Deutschland.
Kocsis calls his troupe
the Human Natural Theatre.
This name sounds suspiciously
like that of the NYC Soho Denizens who call themselves
The Nature Theatre of Oklahoma. A title stolen or
borrowed from Kafka…
Some seasons ago, the
Nature Theatre won a major Award & a big Check
from the Young Directors' Project at the Salzburg
Festival.
Their show was concocted
from Telephone Conversations: they called up people to
ask them what they remembered about the play, Romeo & Juliet.
Go Figure…
Nonetheless, they successfully
schlepped this show all around Europe, complete with that
Monster Check!
On the basis of what
I saw, I'm not sure Match will win at Salzburg. What's
the Hungarian for Amateur Theatre?
Although the Cast is
German Heavy, there are also other Naming Areas
represented. How about Orestis Mourtzis, Sebin Yenigün,
Justus Maas, Mabel Galai, & Mo Ahmadi?
But I rather like Zoë
Schreckenberg as a Stage Name: Mountain of Horrors, or Shreks…
One scene involved the
American Moon Landing.
Each Astronaut's
Oxygen Mask was connected to the Rump of the man
in front of him.
Does this tell us anything
about what Europeans think about our Space Program?
Just asking…
•In Russian
Transport, Lad Drives Under Age "Models" from JFK, Working
for Russki Mafia Uncle.
There was almost as
much Russian being spoken in the audience as on the stage
when Erika Sheffer's new Russian Transport
took to the Area Freeways.
The lady next to Your
Arts Reporter informed me that this was Ms. Sheffer's first play!
Not only did she use
a lot of Russian, but there were plentiful exclamations of Bullshit,
Fucking, & similar Non Slavic Locutions. Which
suggests that all those transplanted Russkis over in Brighton
Beach are assimilating very rapidly.
Janeane Garofalo
plays Diana, the Mater Familias, who is not only
foul mouthed but also a Control Freak, to the immense annoyance
of her son & her daughter--who wants to spend an educational
summer in Florence.
Dad runs a Car Service,
with his son helping out.
But everyone has been
waiting breathlessly for the arrival of Diana's Brother
from Russia.
Well, he's not really
such a Nice Guy, even though he has Muscles & Ink…
If you saw The New Group's
previous production, Burning--with all kinds of Sex
on display--there is a Dicey Moment here as well…
The estimable Scott
Elliott staged a cast including Daniel Oreskes, Morgan
Spector, Sarah Steele, & Raviv Ullman.
The complicated double
level setting was the design of Derek McLane.
•Cynthia Nixon
Shaves Her Head for Wit, But the Brain Is Still Sharp…
My guess is that Cynthia
Nixon should join Kevin Spacey at the Tony©
Awards Ceremony when they celebrate the Best Actor
& Best Actress!
Nixon is simply splendid
as a Crusty Prof of Eng Lit, specializing in the Poems
of John Donne.
Death, Be Not Proud!
I'm giving you a C+!
As Vivian Bearing,
PhD, Nixon is dying of Ovarian Cancer, though it seems
it's the Chemotherapy that's going to kill her first.
Margaret Edson's
play is a Marvel & Nixon is positively Nixonian
in it…
We know at the outset
that Vivian is soon going to die. But how will she deal
with that?
Fortunately, MTC's venerable
director, Lynne Meadow, has chosen a cast that includes
Michael Countryman, Suzanne Bertish, &
Greg Keller.
•Why Didn't Martin
Luther King Create Porgy & Bess: Who's This White Guy,
Anyway?
There has long been
anguish & even anger among some irritable African Americans
that two Jewish Guys, George & Ira Gershwin,
created the Demi Opera, Porgy & Bess.
Well, folks, William
Grant Still had other things to compose…
As for would be African
American Operas, the earliest effort was Scott Joplin's
Ragtime Inflected Tremonisha. Charming, but not
a Major Work…
Nobody complained when
Charleston's own DuBose Heyward wrote the original story
about Porgy, who was a real Charlestonian. Yes,
there was & is a Catfish Row…
Preparing to adapt the
Dorothy & DuBose Heyward Theatre Guild Drama for the
Musical Stage, George Gershwin actually went offshore of Charleston
to study the Gullah Dialect on an island where it had survived
intact.
Your Roving Arts Reporter
can share these tidbits because he made a Major Presentation--with
Slides--abut the genesis of Porgy & Bess
for the Opera Workshop of the Bregenz Festival the second
time it staged this fascinating work on the great Lake Stage on
Lake Constance.
[Soon, when all the
Six Decades of my Interviews, Critiques, & Reports
are on line, interested Internet Surfers will be
able to find my reports on both Bregenz Porgys.
[The first production,
staged by the Met Opera's Nathaniel Merrill, had the largest
Catfish Row in the world, designed by Robert O'Hearn.
[The most recent Iteration,
staged by the late Götz Friedrich, took place under
an earthquake shattered Elevated Freeway, inspired by photos
of the Loma Prieta Earthquake in California. A Long
Way Off from Charleston…]
The new production--which
has come to Broadway's Richard Rodgers Theatre from ART--has
been shortened by the Adapters, Susan Lori Parks &
Diedre Murray.
Nonetheless, the Full
Title is THE GERSHWINS' PORGY & BESS. The Gershwin
Works that remain in the show are "licensed by the Gershwin Family."
Some Critic Scholars
have complained that the Buzzard song has been left out.
Frankly, the show works better when it is not as long as
Opera Companies like to make it.
The current production
has plenty of Plot & Pathos, lots of energetic Dancing
& lusty Singing, plus enough wonderful George Gershwin
Melodies & Ira Gershwin Lyrics to satisfy the most
demanding Broadway Musical Fan.
What's more, all the
voices are outstanding, especially the Porgy of Norm
Lewis--often wonderfully nuanced, the much abused Bess
of Audra McDonald, the Clara of Nikki Renée
Daniels, the Serena of Bryonha Marie Parham,
& the Crown of Phillip Boykin.
David Alan Grier's
Sportin' Life--always a strong contrast to the rather simple
Local Folks on Catfish Row--is a sneaky, snappy dressing,
smooth Operator.
But some Porgy Experts
have compared him somewhat slightingly to previous Purveyors
of Happy Dust.
This really isn't fair,
as most of the Enthusiastic Audiences at the Richard Rodgers won't
have seen every Porgy Production in the last two decades.
He is just fine in this bustling framing of Porgy's sad tale.
The original/actual
Porgy drove around Charleston in a Goat Cart.
In some stagings, he's
been seen driving off to New York in his Cart to find Bess.
It never looked like
the Goat would make it up to the North Carolina Border,
let alone all the way to Harlem.
But the last song Porgy
sings as he leaves Catfish Row tells us he's on his way to
that Heavenly Land.
Which surely wasn't
Harlem, even in the putative 1930's of this fable…
[If there were to be
a Special Tony© Award for Most Convincing Counterfeiting
of a Crippled Left Leg, it could well be a Tie between
Kevin Spacey, as King Richard III, & Norm Lewis,
as Porgy.
[It must be Hell
to lope about the stage, dragging a Game Leg around. At
least Kevin Spacey doesn't have to sing as well as emote…]
Diane Paulus
directed this Porgy Edition. She is the Artistic Director
of the American Repertory Theatre--founded by Robert
Brustein, when they more or less tired of him at The Yale
School of Drama.
•From William
Christie & Enchanted Island at the Met to Baroque Opera
at Juilliard's Tully Hall.
Considering the Vocal,
Orchestral, & Visual Splendors William Christie has
invoked with the stunning Period Productions of his Les Arts
Florissants, Your Arts Reporter thought--in advance of actually
seeing him on the Podium--Magisterial might be the
right word to use to describe his conducting the bright young
Juilliard Orchestra.
While Christie is most
certainly a Master of the Baroque, especially of Baroque
Operas, working with the young instrumentalists, he showed
a great affection & understanding for both the works he was
conducting, as well as for the making them live in performance,
coaxing the best from his effectively "Baroque Orchestra."
Katherine Whyte
was the excellent soloist in the "Excerpts" Christie had chosen
from Henry Purcell's The Fairy Queen. Notable:
Ye gentle spirits of the Air.
After the Interval in
Alice Tully Hall, we all metaphorically crossed the English
Channel to join Jean Philippe Rameau for tasty
morsels of his Les fêtes d'Hébé.
These Fêtes
were vocally illuminated by Raquel González &
Lilla Heinrich Szász.
A splendid evening,
even without the splendid Baroque Costumes & Decors
of Les Arts Florissants…
•Look Back
in Anger Revived, But Young Brits Have More Cause for
Anger Now Than Then…
One of the first Theatre
Experiences Your Roving Arts Reporter had in London was not
in the trendy West End, but on Sloane Square, where
George Devine had given the Royal Court Theatre
a new life, launching what were soon called "Kitchen Sink"
dramas.
The year was 1956
& I had just come to Europe from California to teach our Occupation
Forces for the University of Maryland.
On my first visit to
London--mainly to find Distant Relatives: my Grandmother's
First Cousin, George Cornwallis West, had married
Jennie Jerome, Lord Randolph's widow, so he was Winston
Churchill's detested Step father--I made a point of seeing
shows at the Old Vic--long before Kevin Spacey took
it over, Her Majesty's, The Criterion, Wyndhams,
& all the other Name Brands near Leicester Square &
Piccadilly Circus.
But there was to be
a Premiere way over at the Royal Court, where George Bernard
Shaw's new plays had been unveiled on Special Sundays--by
Subscription--when he could not get a show mounted in the
West End.
This was called Look
Back in Anger, by a testy young playwright named John Osborne.
Indeed, John was so
purposefully difficult that I decided not to interview
him about His Anger or that of his Anti Hero, Jimmy
Porter…
In fact, some seasons
much later, when John's A Bond Honoured was playing in
tandem with my friend Peter Shaffer's play, Black
Comedy, at the Old Vic, Peter & I had to hide out in the
Bar--John's show was on first--so he wouldn't see us & raise
a rumpus that Peter Shaffer was seeing his play free.
In the event, there
were no seats at all for the second half of this double bill,
so Peter & I had to stand in the back of the Royal Circle.
The house darkened, but the curtain didn't go up & didn't
go up…
Then some black clad
Equerries scurried by us, making way for Princess Margaret,
followed at the requisite three paces by her then Consort,
Anthony Armstrong Jones.
It was Margaret's Birthday
& she had just come from being Honoured by the Mayor
of the City of London.
Peter bowed & kissed
her hand, followed by a bit of chit chat. Then she progressed
to the Royal Box, as Peter shook Tony Armstrong Jones'
hand & chatted briefly.
Then, Peter's Play began…
Later, Peter said: "I
didn't dare present you to Princess Margaret. I never know
with You Yanks if you are going to bow or to curtsy.
"If you violated Protocol,
she'd never speak to me again. The Queen, on the other hand, loves
Yanks & would have been glad to shake your hand. But Margaret
is very much No. Two & very much stands on Ceremony…"
Well, Look Back in
Anger--in its dated period way--is also rather noisily,
even violently, about Class.
Way back then--much,
much later, as well--it was still about Class.
Jimmy Porter
[Matthew Rhys] has, somewhat deliberately, married above
his Class.
He seems to be getting
even with the System by treating his long suffering but
loving young wife, Alison [Sarah Goldberg], like--as
the Brits now say--like Shite.
But then, he seems equally
rude to his flat sharing buddy, Cliff Lewis [Adam
Driver], & to Alison's friend, Helena [Charlotte
Parry].
Having shared Flats
in London--not in the Midlands, where Jimmy & Alison
are living & partly living, in TS Eliot's
phrase--I vividly remembered those Sunday, Bloody Sundays,
when, after Church there was absolutely Nothing To Do
but read The Times & The Observer.
Theatre performances
were forbidden!
Way back in 1956, I
wondered why Jimmy didn't seem to have a Day Job. There
was Work, if you were willing to do it…
As John Osborne imagined
him, Jimmy's Life Purpose seemed to scoff & rage &
play his horn.
Did Roundabout revive
this Kitchen Sinker because of the Recent Urban Riots
in England?
Now, there is considerably
less Work than there was then.
But we are here in Manhattan
& they are Over There…
One used to say--of
Super Lavish Productions--that No Expense Has Been Spared.
At the romantic Laura
Pels Theatre--in the bustling Harold & Mimi Steinberg
Theatre Center--almost every expense--except Actor Salaries--has
been spared.
The drama takes place
in front of a Grey Drop that pushes everything into about
four feet from the stage edge.
So, like those Medieval
Mystery Plays, that were played in narrow Medieval Streets,
this Look Back is also played in Linearity.
Think about it: The
Mysteries were already Looking Back to Centuries
Long Past: On the Cross, did Jesus Look Back
in Anger?
The Mystery is
why did Roundabout revive this play? Why not Osborne's
Inadmissible Evidence, or, even better, The Entertainer?
Even Osborne's East
of Suez might have something relevant to say to our
War Hungry Pentagon Generals…
Sam Gold staged.
•Thundering Thunderbirds
Take Over New City: Impressive Amer Ind Dances & Rituals.
Once again, it was inspiring
to see members of various Native American Tribes working
& performing together to present a thoughtful sampling of
the Dances & Rituals of Indians from the Great Plains,
the Northwest Coast, the Iroquois, & the Southwest,
at Crystal Field's Theatre for the New City.
It's not just that the
handsome & varied Costumes & Head dresses
themselves seem of Museum Quality, but it's even more exciting
to see them In Motion on these intrepid members of the
Thunderbird American Indian Dancers.
The hordes of herds
of Buffalo on the Plains are long gone, but the Buffalo
Dance has been preserved.
From Alaska,
comes the Caribou Dance. From Mexico, come some
charming folk tales…
Louis Mofsie--who
is both Hopi & Winnebago--was the thoughtful,
be feathered MC in Chief.
The Thunderbirds not
only sell Native Crafts & Jewelry, but they also offer Lessons
in
Native
American Dancing.
There's even going to
be a Dance Social at the National Museum of the American Indian
on 21 April, down at One Bowling Green. That's the monumental
old Customs House that was…
Because Crystal Field's
New City Heating Plant is almost defunct,
we were urged to Sign a Petition to Albany to provide
some State Funding to fix it.
Your Roving Arts Reporter
thought Gov. Andrew Cuomo could harness some of that Hot
Air up in Albany & send it down to First Avenue…
Not to overlook Making
It Up to all the American Indians--not just for the Buffalo
we slaughtered, but also for all that Land we Took--by
giving back to them both Oklahoma & Nebraska…
•Cultured Pearl
of a Play at the Pearl: GBS's The Philanderer: Lessons
To Be Learnt!
As is now usual with
productions of Classic & Modern Revivals at the Pearl
Theatre, the new staging of The Philanderer is very
handsomely mounted & very energetically played.
In fact, there is almost
Too Much Energy on stage as the Tempestuous Julia Craven
[Karron Graves] throws fits, sulks, rages, swoons, &
generally Tears a Passion to a Tatters, trying to prevent
her Lover/Admirer Leonard Charteris [Brad Cover]
from marrying the level headed Widow Grace Tranfield [Rachel
Botchan].
Bernard Shaw
wrote this comedy--his second drama--way back in 1893,
but the Lord Chamberlain's Office wouldn't license it for
performance until 1902.
Nora had slammed
that Famous Door on Torwald, forever changing the
way Women, Wives, & Mothers thought about themselves
& their previously Ordained Roles in Society.
London was in
the grips of Ibsenism. Of which Shaw was the Principle
Proponent.
Two scenes of The
Philanderer even take place in The Ibsen Club, where
"Manly" Men & Fluttering Females are not Welcome.
All this Fuss
must have seemed Very Important--even Threatening to some
Traditionalists--at that time, but, now, it is rather like
a Cultural Seminar come to life.
Oddly enough, the most
astonishing moments in the production were the swiftly swivelling
Stage Set Panels--created by Designer Jo Winiarski--suggestively
changing the Scenes almost instantly.
GBS, whose Loves
& Affairs didn't really seem to include the woman he married,
Charlotte Shaw, modeled Charteris on himself, a charming
Intellectual, who fancies himself irresistible to
women.
A little of This
goes a Long Way, but plays were longer then…
Dominic Cuskern
plays Grace's father, who is A Drama Critic. So was Shaw,
but he seems to have admired himself more as a Lothario,
fighting off Importunate Females.
Also on hand are Dan
Daily, Chris Mixon, & Shalita Grant--who
really takes her Ibsenism seriously.
Gus Kaikkonen
staged, but he may need a Lexicon. His Director's Note
notes that: London was in the throws of Ibsenism…
Surely he means Throes,
not Throws?
STARS IN THEIR
CROWNS:
This Month's Rational
Ratings--
Athol Fugard's THE
ROAD TO MECCA [★★★]
Cate Ryan's THE
PICTURE BOX [★★]
Zayd Dorhn's OUTSIDE
PEOPLE [★★★]
Molly Smith Metzler's
CLOSE UP SPACE [★★★]
Chris Marlowe's,
Wm. Shakespeare's or Anonymous' RICHARD III [★★★★★]
László
Kocsis' MATCH
[★★]
Erika Sheffer's
RUSSIAN TRANSPORT [★★★]
Margaret Edson's
WIT [★★★★★]
George Gershwin's
[Revamped] PORGY & BESS
[★★★★]
John Osborne's LOOK
BACK IN ANGER [★★★]
George Bernard Shaw's
THE PHILANDERER [★★★]
Arts Rambles News &
Notes:
FANTASTIC RECORDS
& MILESTONES BROKEN & PASSED
BY LLOYD WEBBER'S
FANTASTIC PHANTOM OF THE OPERA…
Andrew Lloyd
Webber's The Phantom of the Opera--directed
by Harold Prince & produced by Cameron Mackintosh
& The Really Useful Company--will yet again make Theater
History, when it celebrates its 10,000th
Performance on Saturday, 11 February 2012, at 2pm, a Feat
achieved by no other Broadway Show.
This Milestone
is just down the road from the Musical Phenomenon's celebration
of its equally unprecedented 24th Anniversary
on Thursday, 26 January 2012, at the Majestic Theatre [247
West 44th Street]. The Historic 10,000th Performance
will benefit The Actors Fund.
The Phantom of
the Opera became the Longest Running Show in Broadway
History on 9 January 2006, with its 7,486th
Performance--surpassing the previous Record Holder, Andrew
Lloyd Webber's Cats, also produced by Cam Mackintosh,
who named his Production Company after his Swiss Army Knife:
Something really useful…
Incredibly, since breaking
that Record, Phantom has played both an additional
6 years & 2,500 Performances--which by itself
would be a Smash Hit Run for a Broadway Musical.
Entering its 25th
Year on 26 January, the Broadway production of The Phantom
of the Opera remains a Box Office Champ and continues
to play with No End in Sight.
On Broadway, since its
debut on 26 January 1988, Phantom has grossed $845
Million, making it the Highest Grossing Show in Broadway
History.
Earlier this month [January,
that is], the production shattered the House Record at
The Majestic by having its Best Weekly Gross in its entire
24 year history.
For the week ending
1 January 2012, the production grossed a phenomenal $1,460,005.59
for 8 performances.
Total Attendance
is over 14.7 Million. [But not in just that week…]
Its International
Success--equally staggering--is represented by Total Worldwide
Grosses estimated at over $5.6 Billion.
This Colossal Figure
makes Phantom the Most Successful Entertainment
Venture of all time, with revenues higher than any
Film or Stage Play in History, including Titanic
& Star Wars & far surpassing the World's Highest
Grossing Film Avatar [at a mere $2.7 Billion].
Worldwide, over
65,000 performances have been seen by 130 Million
People in 27 countries & 145 cities, in 13
languages.
The Flagship London
Production--which opened in 1986 at Her Majesty's Theatre--celebrated
25 years in October 2011. [Your Roving Arts Reporter was
on hand for that Opening!]
There are currently
6 Productions around the world: London, New York,
Budapest (Hungary), Kyoto (Japan), Johannesberg
(South Africa) & a revised production in Las Vegas
at The Venetian.
[The Phantom Press
Release brackets the Names of the Nations in
which Andrew, Lord Somethingorother's Fantastic
Musical is playing, but is it really necessary to identify
Budapest as being in Hungary? Where else
would you expect to find Budapest? Ireland? Isn't that
the place where Kyoto is located? Just asking…]
In March 2012, Cameron
Mackintosh's All New Production of The Phantom of the Opera
will launch a UK National Tour.
The show has won more
than 60 Major Theater Awards, including 7 1988 Tony©
Awards--including Best Musical--& three Olivier
Awards in the West End. [Not to be confused with Manhattan's
West End Avenue…]
The Original Cast
Recording--with over 40 Million Copies sold Worldwide--is
the Best Selling Cast Recording of all time.
In September 2010, Student
Productions of Phantom of the Opera started
being licensed through R&H Theatricals. The Show has
so far been performed at hundreds of High Schools
& Colleges across the US & in Canada.
[Eat Your Hearts Out,
Wicked & Hairspray!]
[R&H stands
for Rodgers & Hammerstein, who obviously represent
more Composers & Lyricists than Dick & Oscar.
Is that why The Gershwin's Porgy & Bess is now at the
Richard Rodgers Theatre?]
Caricature
of Glenn Loney in header is by Sam Norkin.
Copyright
© Glenn Loney 20012. No re-publication or broadcast use without
proper credit of authorship. Suggested credit line: "Glenn
Loney Arts Rambles." Reproduction rights please contact:
jslaff@nymuseums.com.
Past
Loney's Show Notes
Past
Loney's Museum Notes