"New York is my Personal Property and I'm gonna split it with you." I review mostly movies and New York theater shows. I am also an awards prognosticator. And a playwright.
▼
Thursday, June 5, 2025
Wednesday, June 4, 2025
Reviews: Off-Broadway Provides an Enjoyable and Well-Cast Revival of the Rarely Produced “Bus Stop” as Well as an Experimental, Fascinating but Head-Scratching “Bowl EP,” While Wes Anderson Returns to Full-Length Films With the Endlessly Clever “The Phoenician Scheme”
Bus Stop (c) Carol Rosegg
Theater: Bus Stop
At Classic Stage Company (closing this weekend)
The plays of Pulitzer Prize-winning William Inge are rarely produced these days, even though he was seen, when he was most popular, as talented and important as his contemporaries: Arthur Miller and Tennessee Williams. One reason is that his plays are most assuredly realistic and don’t tackle political or controversial issues of the day. But they are well-made plays, which was clear in the last Broadway revival of Picnic in 2013, which introduced Sebastian Stan to the world. And now you see it in the Classic Stage Company/NAATCO/Transport Group co-production of 1956’s Bus Stop, which is now only remembered for the Joshua Logan film starring Marilyn Monroe. The titular stop is a diner on a remote but heavily populated bus route in Missouri, run by Grace (a no-nonsense Cindy Cheung), with an assist by bright high school student Elma (Delphi Borich). On this particular night, there’s a big windy snowstorm, so the next bus is stranded there until it passes. On the bus is Cherie (the Marilyn Monroe part, played humorously by Midori Francis), a nightclub singer who has been abducted by a young cowboy named Bo (Michael Hsu Rosen, playing up the cluelessness rather than the brutishness), who asked Cherie to marry him, but never bothered to hear her answer (which is no).
Tuesday, June 3, 2025
GALECA Theater Critics Honor "Cats: The Jellicle Ball" and "John Proctor is the Villain" for 2025 Dorian Theater Awards
John Proctor is the Villain (c) Julieta Cervantes