Monday, February 26, 2024

Weekly Margin 2024, W8: The Moonshot Tape & A Poster of the Cosmos, Jelly's Last Jam

What: For one week only, Deep Flight Products presents two monologue one acts by Lanford Wilson.
And? full review here



What: NY City Center Encores! series presents George C. Wolfe and Susan Birkenhead's biomusical about Jelly Roll Morton (a man who claims to have invented Jazz but is at least responsible for helping to annotate it).
And? I like its unusual framing, so it doesn't feel like a cookie cutter story: a retrospective look back at his life now that he's passed on, as hosted by the Chimney Man, where Jelly himself is revealed to be an unreliable narrator. The musical numbers are fun, especially the dance sequences, and it's such a remarkable coup to have the three women who originated the Greek chorus of the Hunnies--Mamie Duncan-Gibbs, Stephanie Pope Lofgren, and Allison M. Williams--return to reprise their roles. While I don't think the show will stick to my ribs, I'm still glad I saw it.

Allison M. Williams, Stephanie Pope Lofgren, and Mamie Duncan-Gibbs
as the Hunnies. Photo by Joan Marcus.


Saturday, February 24, 2024

Margin Notes: The Moonshot Tape & A Poster of The Cosmos


Seen on: Friday, 2/23/24.

Plot and Background
Deep Flight Productions present a pair of monologue one acts by Lanford Wilson for one week only at The Flea. Both plays concern a character answering questions from an unseen person. In A Poster of The Cosmos, Tom curls over a takeout coffee in a precinct interrogation room after the death of his lover; in The Moonshot Tape, Diane grants an interview to a student in her hometown while staying in a rundown motel near her mother's nursing home.

What I Knew Beforehand
I had read both plays, years ago, in the collection of 21 one acts by Lanford Wilson, but I didn't remember most of the content. But I know and love the work and voice of Lanford Wilson, and I was very excited to get to see some of his work performed.

Thoughts:

At the end of Cosmos, Tom asks if the police are happy now that he's finished telling the terrible story of his lover's death from AIDS, and his attempt to cope with that moment. At the end of Moonshot, Diane offers her interviewer a drink, to help digest her story of sexual abuse and revenge. But the question they're really asking is "Do you regret asking me to tell you the truth?" Because the thing about knowing the truth is, you can never unknow it. This horrible thing that has been living inside Tom, inside Diane, has spread to live inside their interrogators, has spread to live inside us.

Monday, February 19, 2024

Weekly Margin 2024, W7: Public Obscenities, The Seven Year Disappear, Prayer for the French Republic

2/13/24: Public Obscenities
What: TFANA hosts Soho Rep and NAATCO National Partnership Project's production of Shayok Misha Chowdhury's play about Choton, a queer studies PhD student who, with his boyfriend, travels to his family home in Kolkata, India to research the queer Bengal community in the wake of the repeal of anti-sodomy and anti-homosexual laws.
And? I loved it. This is the rare play that lets itself breathe (yes, it's a little over three hours but it's worth it), that lets its characters exist in both the quiet and noisy ends of the spectrums of memory, introspection, loneliness, and the urge for connection. A major motif in the play is the power and permanence of photographs: not only the large and gloomy photograph of Choton's grandfather, who stands guard over the house, but the recently-discovered and revealing photographs taken just days before his death. Once a person dies, there will never be any more new photos taken of them; this is all we get. But there's power in the discovery of photos unknown, showing a side long hidden. And these photographs, these films, these voice memos, these attempts by Choton and Raheem to document the ephemeral, they give us something, but they also never quite capture all we remember of the moment--including, perhaps especially, the one documenting them: the one behind the camera. This play is such a gift; I'm glad I didn't miss it.

Abra Haque, Debashis Roy Chowdhury, and Jakeem Dante Powell as Choton,
Pishe, and Raheem. Photo by Hollis King.


What: The New Group presents a new play by Jordan Seavey: a two-hander metatheatrical nonlinear look at a complicated mother-son relationship and the damage caused when the experimental artist mother disappears for seven years on the brink of her MoMA commission.
And? A really interesting line of tension in the voyeuristic excavation of Naphtali's trauma after his abandonment at the hands of his mother and business partner. I think, even at the end, I don't forgive her; I don't think we're meant to. It's too little too late, and in having Cynthia Nixon's character play everyone else her son meets, even if she thinks she's atoning, it's still all about her. But yeah, it's very good multimedia theater.




Monday, February 5, 2024

Weekly Margin 2024, W5: Hamlet

2/04/24: Hamlet
What: Eddie Izzard performs a one person Hamlet, as adapted by Mark Izzard.
And? She's always an engaging performer, as we all know, and there are some very powerful moments of discovery, when she lets herself breathe into a moment. I think overall this would be a confusing production to follow for anyone not already familiar with the characters and story (the sword fight at the end is, well, a lot of jumping around), but it's worth seeing for fans of Suzy Izzard.