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Tri-State Theater

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Thursday, September 04, 2008

A Scarcity of Plays on Broadway?

Since this blog is affiliated with the Herald-Dispatch, I can share Associated Press stories with you, like this one about the scarcity of new (non-musical) plays on Broadway this fall:
By Michael Kuchwara, AP Drama Writer

NEW YORK (AP) -
Where have all the new plays gone?

On Broadway this fall, it will be lonely pair - To Be or Not to Be and Dividing the Estate - that will qualify as new works in a season studded with starry revivals such as Equus and All My Sons.

Quite a change from last year, where the fall had plays by Tracy Letts, Tom Stoppard, Conor McPherson, Aaron Sorkin and even Mark Twain (well, adapted by David Ives) on tap. And David Mamet showed up with a new one, too - in January.

"Broadway has been fairly unfriendly to the new play for a while," said Daniel Sullivan, acting artistic director last season for Manhattan Theatre Club, which will produce one of those two new works. "When you are talking between $2 million and $3 million, just to put on a five- or six-character play on Broadway, you can't blame producers for being shy."

No wonder both To Be or Not to Be and Dividing the Estate are being produced by nonprofit, noncommercial theaters.

To Be or Not to Be is a familiar title-at least to movie buffs. It's a stage adaptation by Nick Whitby of the 1942 film comedy starring Jack Benny and Carole Lombard about the tribulations of a theater troupe in Warsaw trying to open a play as the Nazis invade Poland. It was remade in the 1980s, with Mel Brooks and Anne Bancroft in leading roles.

The comedy, directed by Casey Nicholaw of The Drowsy Chaperone fame, opens Oct. 2 at the newly rechristened Samuel J. Friedman Theatre (formerly the Biltmore). Heading the large cast of a dozen actors are David Rasche and Jan Maxwell.

To Be or Not to Be came to Manhattan Theatre Club through a commercial producer, Bob Boyett, who had the rights but felt because of the show's multiple sets and extensive costumes, it was too big for him to take on commercially.

"He came to us and asked if we would put it on, and he would help out," Sullivan said. "It would be very difficult for us to afford to do it on our own. It this case, it's a fortuitous linkage of the commercial and the not-for-profit."

Dividing the Estate by Horton Foote arrives on Broadway after a successful off-Broadway run last season. The play, a revised version of a work the 92-year-old Foote wrote nearly two decades ago, concerns a Texas family's squabble over an inheritance.

The comedy will open Nov. 20 at the Booth Theatre with its off-Broadway cast including Elizabeth Ashley, Arthur French, Hallie Foote, Penny Fuller and Gerald McRaney.

Elsewhere on Broadway, it's big names in old plays.

The parade starts with Equus, a revival of Peter Shaffer's psychological drama featuring Daniel Radcliffe, in-between starring in all those "Harry Potter" movies.

The 19-year-old Radcliffe portrays a troubled young man who blinds a stable full of horses, and a psychiatrist, played by Richard Griffiths, who attempts to find out why. The answer will be revealed Sept. 25 when Equus opens at the Broadhurst Theatre. A lot more will be revealed, too, because Radcliffe also strips to the skin.

Nobody takes their clothes off in Anton Chekhov's The Seagull (as far we know), the master's wryly melancholic tale of unhappy aristocrats in late 19th century Russia. Kristin Scott Thomas stars as a self-absorbed actress in a production cheered by the London critics in 2007. Peter Sarsgaard also is in the American cast. The angst and unfulfillment commence Oct. 1 at the Walter Kerr Theatre.

There's nothing wrong with a little heroics and they don't get much braver than Sir Thomas More, who had the moral fortitude to stand up to Henry VIII and his desire for a divorce. The play is Robert Bolt's A Man for All Seasons, and More will be portrayed by an actor of uncommon ability, Frank Langella. Look for the Roundabout Theatre Company production Oct. 7 at its American Airlines Theatre.

Arthur Miller always was intrigued, too, by the battle between right and wrong. And the highly moral concerns of his late 1940s drama All My Sons will get another airing starting Oct. 16 at the Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre.

The cast includes John Lithgow, Dianne Wiest, Patrick Wilson and, attracting the most attention, Katie Holmes, possibly because some hope to see her husband, Tom Cruise, waiting for her at the stage door after evening performances.

The play (for those who are more concerned about plot) tells the story of businessman Joe Keller (Lithgow), whose factory supplied defective cylinder parts to the military, resulting in the deaths of 21 pilots during World War II. Wiest will play Keller's wife and Wilson, his idealistic son.

Theatergoers will also be treated to a battle between two Mamet revivals-each showcasing offbeat casts.

In one corner, we have Speed-The-Plow, Mamet's cynical look at Hollywood glamour, sex and power, featuring Jeremy Piven, Raul Esparza and, in the role originated by Madonna in the play's first Broadway production, Elisabeth Moss. Look for it Oct. 23 at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre.

In the other corner, John Leguizamo, Cedric the Entertainer and Haley Joel Osment star in the playwright's Chicago robbery caper, American Buffalo. The opening is Nov. 17 at the Belasco.

For those still hankering for new work, look off-Broadway where a couple of intriguing possibilities arrive before Thanksgiving.

Will drama off the playing field be potent enough in Back Back Back, Itamar Moses' baseball tale set against the steroid controversy? To find out, play ball Nov. 5 at Manhattan Theatre Club's Stage II.

Games of another kind will be present in Farragut North, Beau Willimon's cautionary tale of Washington power politics. John Gallagher, a Tony winner for Spring Awakening, stars. The dirty doings are exposed Nov. 12 at the Atlantic Theater Company.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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