Showing posts with label Tracy Letts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tracy Letts. Show all posts

Friday, April 28, 2017

DAY 10 Tribeca 2017: In 'Take Me," Is It All a Role or Is It the Real Deal? You Decide ... ‘The Lovers’ Takes Its Sweet Time, All the More Reason to Commune With Debra Winger


Taylor Schilling is either a thrillseeker or a hostage in "Take Me."

BY V.W.

IF
you are a thrillseeker or in need of alternative therapy to cure what troubles you, Ray is your guy.

He provides kidnapping/abduction services, usually up to eight hours. That is the premise of "Take Me,” director and star Pat Healy’s offbeat black comedy. It continues its world premiere run at the 2017 Tribeca Film Festival tonight.

Ray has recently moved his business from Atlantic City (declining economy) to his boyhood home of Van Nuys California (free board in his boyhood home).

The business is floundering but looks like it is about to take off when Ray books a new client (Taylor Schilling.). The unnamed mystery woman wants to be abducted for the weekend. This is irregular, but Ray is broke and Anna is flush with $5,000 - half paid up front.

"Take Me," heretofore plodding and frankly boring, begins to gain some traction once the abduction is in progress. At first, it is simply silly roleplay that will grow quickly stale. Both actors play these parts well. That is acting to make poor roleplay look like poor roleplay. Looks easy, ain't easy.

But then there is a shift when the viewer will have an internal debate about - informed by TS’s wholly credible performance - whether the abduction is still roleplay or an abduction. One is certain that s/he knows what is going on, but there is that kernel of doubt. You wouldn’t bet the farm that you know what is going on, but you’d bet the chicken coop.

Interspersed throughout "Take Me" is somewhat witty dialogue and good physical comedy that has overtones of "Home Alone," "The Roadrunner” and "Bugs Bunny.”

There is even a somewhat happy ending as a disillusioned Ray is confronted with unassailable evidence that his work has done some good.

Meanwhile, marriage can grow stale, especially if it is not nurtured like the most fragile bloom. Ask anyone who's indulged.

Ask Mary (Debra Winger) and Michael (Tracy Letts) in "The Lovers," Azazel Jacobs’ romantic comedy in the final screening this evening of its world premiere run.

Happily, Mary and Michael do not hate each other. In fact, they like and respect each other. They are simply indifferent to each other. The thrill is long gone, compelling them to seek it out elsewhere. Both are having an affair and plan to leave the other after a much anticipated visit of Joel (and his girlfriend; Tyler Ross and Jessica Sula), the son that they both dearly love. 

About their respective subterfuges, Mary and Michael are going happily and hornily along spending time with their respective paramours, "working late" and pursuing other obligations that demand that one be absent from home when one is actually a dirty, lying, scheming cheater.   

Then, one morning in bed when they are facing each other with eyes closed, quite inadvertently Michael gives Mary a peck on the lips. Clearly, he thinks she is Lucy (Melora Walters). Mary gives Michael a peck on the lips. Clearly, she thinks he is  Robert (Aidan Gillen.

Respective eyes jut open simultaneously. Shocked  - SHOCKED to the core - they rise. And scatter. After a short pause, or after the shock wears off, they have a volcanic collision. Of hot, passionate sex.

Some viewers will be put off by the pacing of "The Lovers," for it takes its time arriving at this juncture. Others won't mind. The leisurely pace gives them time to glory in DW doing her thing. What a treat it is to see her on the big screen after such a long absence!

Early one morning a spark between Mary (Debra Winger) and Michael (Tracy Letts) is lit in "The Lovers."


Another joy in viewing "The Lovers" is seeing middle-age folk in love scenes. To be more precise, middle-aged men in love scenes with middle-aged women.

Heretofore indifferent, the spouses are now acting like lovesick teenagers. Texting - and likely sexting -  giving each other goo-goo eyes and so forth. And cheating on their paramours. Immoral! Simply amusing!

When Joel arrives he is utterly perplexed by his parents' behavior. Of course, he believes it is all an act. They excel at pretending, after all. When his confusion overtakes him, he has his own volcanic eruption before he Erin take themselves off.

AJ's slip of a script is irrelevant. The four principles elevate it, transforming  through ease of craft, material that is often pedestrian into something special.

And "The Lovers" boasts an ending that promises more sparks. And possibly a sequel?

Other films/events on today's 2017 Tribeca Film Festival schedule:

“Tribeca: Immersive,” Tribeca Games Opening Night Concert, “The Dinner,” “Whitney: Can I Be Me,” “Shorts: Disconnected,” “Son of Sofia,” “I AM EVIDENCE,” “Shadowman,” “The Lovers,” “Shorts: Last Exit,” “The Death and Life of Marsha P. Johnson,” “The Divine Order,” “Copwatch,” “No Man’s Land,” “Take Me,” “Can’t Stop, Won’t Stop: The Bad Boy Story,” “Shorts: New York - Group Therapy,” “For Ahkeem,” “Devil’s Gate,” “Reservoir Dogs,” “The Vietnam War,” “The Eyeslicer,” “Year of the Scab,” “Get Me Roger Stone,” “Holy Air,” “Saturday Church,” “Dabka,” “The Exception,” “Pilgrimage,” “Dare to Be Different,” “Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt”


Visit http://www.tribecafilm.com/festival to learn more about it and the 2016 Tribeca Film Festival, including tickets and schedule.

Saturday, May 31, 2014

Cruelest Cuts of the Tony Awards Committee

"If/Then," featuring Tamika Lawrence, Jenn Colella, LaChanze and Idina Menzel. Photo from production.

BY TAMARA BECK

WHEN Lucy Liu
and Jonathan Groff announced the nominations for the “68th Annual Tony Awards” on 29 April, there were serious oversights.

Some fine and/or interesting productions, as well as superb performances were overlooked. First, gripes about the ones that shoulda been named, then predictions about the winners from those that made the cut.

If this reviewer takes it personally, imagine how the casts and creatives on the unacknowledged and under-acknowledged shows feel. Maybe it's just the Tony committee messing with the regular theater-lover's head.

"The Realistic Joneses," Will Eno's comic tragedy and its deserving star, Toni Colette, did not get a mention. (http://www.bit.ly/1x8UT0S) Although the play left a lot of holes in its odd plot points, it was well-staged and wildly interesting.

The acting from the ensemble of Tracy Letts (a past Tony winner), Michael C. Hall, Marisa Tomei (Academy award winner) and the aforementioned TC, was top-notch. The Joneses meet cute, with one couple stumbling onto the other’s property in the dead of night bearing a bottle of wine. Existential issues are then addressed.

Another overlooked drama was "Lady Day at Emerson's Bar & Grill." Do note, however, that Audra McDonald, as Billie Holiday, was nominated in the Best Actress category. (http://www.bit.ly/1jRGDzG; see video above).

Broadway's producers are to be congratulated for taking the chance on so many straight plays, an oft misunderstood and under-appreciated entertainment this season. The applause would be that much louder, though, if unconventional vehicles like “The Realistic Joneses” were in the Tony running.

Other major snubs include “Bullets Over Broadway,” “If/Then,” “The Bridges of Madison County” and “Rocky.” The blow to all is lessened because each got nods in other categories.

Tracy Letts, Toni Collette, Marisa Tomei and Michael C. Hall in "The Realistic Joneses." Photo from production.

For instance, Woody Allen was tapped for Best Book of a Musical for “Bullets.” Also Nick Cordero is up for Best Featured Actor in a musical for his role as Cheech. “If/Then's” amazing star, Idina Menzel, is up for Best Actress in a Musical. The musical's creative team of Tom Kitt (music) and Brian Yorkey (lyrics) are up for Best Original Score.

Next week: And the Tony goes to ...

The “68th Annual Tony Awards” airs at 8 p.m. on Sunday, 8 June on CBS. Visit http://www.tonyawards.com/ to learn more about the nominations and broadcast.



Sunday, November 4, 2012

'Edward Albee’s Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?' Is 50

Amy Morton and Tracy Letts are a very capable Martha and George in “Edward Albee’s Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" Photos by Michael Brosilow.

BY TAMARA BECK

IT
seems that even love can be a blood sport.

In “Edward Albee’s Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” all of that passion spills out into contentious combat. The play is in a 50th anniversary revival at the Booth Theatre through 24 Feb. 2013.

George (Tracy Letts) and Martha (Amy Morton) duke it out in a battle of words and booze over the course of one long night. Theirs is a perverse love story. (See video below of casting talking about production.)

George is an academic. “I know history,” he says mildly at one point. His wife, Martha, is the daughter of the college president. Just as they get home from one of daddy’s tiring faculty cocktail parties, Martha announces that they are expecting guests – a young couple, Nick (Madison Dirks) and Honey ( (Carrie Coon)). It’s unwelcome but not surprising news to George.

Martha tells George, convincingly, if wrongly, that Nick (Madison Dirks) is in the math department. The pride of Honey, Nick is actually the new biology professor. This seems to be a particularly poignant provocation for George, for him any information can be turned into a weapon. His milquetoast demeanor belies a rapacious wit.

Alcohol fuels the parlor games George and Martha play out in front of their bemused guests. “Humiliate the host” and “Get the guest” are not for the faint of heart. At first, it seems that the new guy in biology will not be able to rise to Martha and George’s challenge. But Nick is another one who should not be underestimated. He knows his way around academe.

Carrie Coon, Tracy Letts, Amy Morton and Madison Dirks in “Edward Albee’s Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?"

George and Martha fight hard and dirty; their refined bickering is a whirlwind of recrimination. The vituperative dialogue in “Edward Albee’s Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” is extremely original and very funny. EA has raised invective to the level of art.

“Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” is a timeless classic of American theater. In its inaugural production in 1962, it won the Tony Award. The revival, ably directed by Pam MacKinnon and on Broadway via Chicago’s Steppenwolf Theatre Company, is on pace to once again garner honors.

Nick (Madison Dirks) proves that he can hold his own with George and Martha (Tracy Letts and Amy Morton) in “Edward Albee’s Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?"

Even after witnessing a number of productions of “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” over the years, including multiple viewings of the 1966 film version starring Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, George Segal and Sandy Dennis, this reviewer still finds “Edward Albee’s Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” fresh and spunky.

TL and AM are more than in their element in portraying the sparring duo of George and Martha, but the young folks are excellent, too. This production is an event!

Visit http://www.virginiawoolfbroadway.com to learn more about “Edward Albee’s Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?”
 
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