Showing posts with label War Horse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label War Horse. Show all posts

Monday, October 3, 2011

More Shows for Boys?

I guess it isn't too surprising to hear from Newsies star Jeremy Jordan that the Disney film upon which the show is based is part of what made him want to be a musical theatre actor.  Or that Lysistrata Jones star Josh Segarra decided the stage was for him after seeing a performance of Take Me Out.  It is moments like that - life changing moments - that most actors can site without even thinking about.  For Jordan, it was seeing guys sing and dance; for Segarra it was about the connection to sports and making that connection onstage.  Either way, we are all better off because these two amazingly talented rising stars have made acting their career.

Boy Gets the Girl: Jeremy Jordan in Newsies
and Josh Segarra in Lysistrata Jones

The review for Disney's Newsies in the New York Times, talks about the future of the property, with Broadway looking more likely than ever, but questions its potential has a mega-hit "Disney" musical.  "The bigger question is Broadway, where the absence of magical elements (talking animals, flying nannies) or a brand-name title may be a handicap, particularly in such a boycentric show."  OK, maybe a lack of flashy spectacle may discourage parents from bringing the littlest theatregoers.  But what about the grossly under served middle and high school boy?  It stands to reason that "boycentric" shows will be of interest to boys.  Boys seeing characters that they can relate to will make a show interesting and even "cool."

There are shows on Broadway right now that should be speaking to these young men, each with a unique role model and hero for boys to look up to.


Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark:  The spectacle, the danger, the awesome aerials, a very cool villain, and even the pretty girl should draw every young comic book fan to the Foxwoods Theatre.  But ultimately, what should stick is the best "boy" character on Broadway, Peter Parker.  There isn't a guy in the world who hasn't felt like a goober - awkward, geeky, zero romantic skills, unheard.  And he's an underdog who rises above all of the bullying.


Disney's The Lion King:  Is there a better way to teach an important lesson about what it means to take responsibility for one's actions, and for the larger picture of being made to answer to the generations before and to provide for generations in the future?  And that it is a young man/cub who takes this journey should make it interesting and poignant to boys of all ages.


Billy Elliot: The most literal lesson on the importance of the arts in a boy's life could also be the coolest and without special effects to boot.  Add the fun of the boy outdoing all those girls certainly has its appeal to a young guy's ego.  It also makes "expressing yourself" no matter how you choose to do so very appealing as well.


War Horse: Life-sized horses, thrilling war scenes, and a young man who sets his fear aside for his best friend sounds like the perfect "boy story" to me.  And what a great chance to show a kid that live theatre can be as action-packed and exciting as a movie!  The ride home could also provide parents a great chance to talk about important "boy" issues - familial responsibility, loyalty, the perils and downside to war, and, yes, the strength of women through it all.

High school guys have Lysistrata Jones to look forward to - college basketball, sexy cheerleaders AND music that you would NOT be embarrassed to have on your iPod!  And if Newsies makes it to Broadway, there's a show for any guy in the family!



Why is that important?  Now is the time for the theatre gods to find the next Jeremy Jordan, Seth Numrich, Reeve Carney and Josh Segarra.  Do you know a young man whose life might be ready to change?  Take him to a Broadway show!


Rate this blog below and leave your comments here, or by email at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com, or Tweet me!
Jeff
3.035

Friday, June 10, 2011

2011 Tony Awards: Isabelle Stevenson, Special Tony and Excellence in Theatre Honorees

Other non-competitive Tony Awards bestowed this year include a Special Tony for The Handspring Puppet Company's work on War Horse, three honorees for the Tony Honors for Excellence in Theatre (William Berloni, The Drama Book Shop, and Sharon Jensen and Alliance for Inclusion in the Arts), and the Isabelle Stevenson Award, given this year to Eve Ensler.

The Isabelle Stevenson Award for Humanitarianism: Eve Ensler

Just the third recipient of this honor, Eve Ensler seems a natural choice, given all she has accomplished through theatre all of the world.  The award, named for the late Isabelle Stevenson, longtime chair of the American Theatre Wing, is presented to an individual in the industry who sets new standards in volunteerism and a substantial contribution to worth causes whether they be related to theatre or not.  (The award may be given annually, but not necessarily each year, and is selected by the Tony Committee.).  Ms. Ensler's work on behalf of ending the violence against women through her V-Day Campaign has reached millions of people worldwide and has collected over $80M in funding for projects that promote education and provide shelter and relief for women who are victims of all types of abuse, be it individual or systemic rape or other tortures.

V-Day came about as a result of a special Valentine's Day performance of Ensler's The Vagina Monologues well into its second year off-Broadway.  The show itself featured three actresses of various generations performing these monologues about their bodies, sexuality and how it all changed their lives (among other things).  The cast list by the time it closed read like a who's who in theater, television and film.  But that special benefit performance featured the talents of none other than Academy Award winners Whoopi Goldberg, Glenn Close and Susan Sarandon among others.  Since then the play has had thousands of free performances on that date on every continent except Antarctica. 


Awareness is at all time high, and yet there is so much more to be done.  And so Ms. Ensler's next play, Emotional Creatures, featuring monologues by and given by girls worldwide, looks to be taking the same path.

Special Tony Award: The Handspring Puppet Company

It really should come as no surprise to anyone who has seen War Horse that the people behind the creation of Joey, Topthorn, several other horses, two crows and goose, The Handspring Puppet Company are receiving a Special Tony in recognition of their remarkable work.  Eight shows a week, these creatures come to astonishing life (and heart-wrenching death in some cases) with the aid of teams of puppeteers who make them twitch, snort, whinny, bat their eyes and move their ears.  So realistic are these structures made of cane, metal and leather, that it is only moments into the performance before you forget the people are even there.


According an article about the group at TonyAwards.com, the South African founders, Basil Jones and Adrian Kohler, are most proud of this award because they feel it elevates the art of puppetry, often looked down upon by actors.  I think their work elevates puppetry to a new standard.  A win-win if you ask me.

Tony Honors: William Berloni

You probably don't know William Berloni by name, but you probably know his work if you've seen any professional production of Annie or marveled at the adorable mutts in Legally Blonde.  Berloni's first job in the theatre was to find and train a "Sandy" for the very first production of Annie at the Goodspeed Opera House.  That first job turned into a career, including finding and training a rat for The Woman in White, and a real baby lamb for the Bernadette Peters revival of Gypsy.  And there appears to be no end in sight: up next, the 2012 revival of, you guessed it, Annie.




Tony Honors: The Drama Book Store

As even the largest bookstore chains are going out of business, it is amazing and heartening to find an individual bookstore that is thriving in this age of online shopping.  And that it is a store that specializes in theatre books tickles me to the core.  The Drama Book Store started as a card table of scripts sold at various theatre lobbies on Broadway.  Then came the Times Square Store, which opened in the 1950's and stayed there until early this century (At one time you could see the shop windows three or four stories up.  Those windows are now blocked by that giant billboard that wraps around the building on the corner opposite the Palace Theatre).  These days, the shop's home is just east of the Port Authority Bus Terminal. Still run by Rozanne Seelen and her nephew, Allen Hubby, the store thrives because of the personal touch.  Imagine having tomorrow's big playwright helping you find just the right monologue for an audition - Douglas Carter Beane was just one playwright/employee.  Or how about hobnobbing with theatre actors who meet there to chat and browse the shelves like Jessica Tandy used to?


Yes, there is a lot to be said for the human touch, especially when it comes to theatre!  For a very interesting interview with the owners of the store, go to http://www.tonyawards.com/.

Tony Honors: Sharon Jensen and Alliance for Inclusion in the Arts

I think that in a community as inclusive as the theatre community is, you'd be hard pressed to find anyone who doesn't think Sharon Jensen and her work with Alliance for Inclusion in the Arts is worthy of such recognition.  Ms. Jensen is the Executive Director of the Alliance for Inclusion in the Arts and has been for 22 of its 25 years in existence.  Over the last quarter century, the organization has represented actors of color and those with disabilities.  Formerly known as The Non-Traditional Casting Project, the group came about after an Actor's Equity study that showed that 90% of all actors hired were Caucasian, and if you took out racially specific works, that percentage was higher. 

These days, their focus has been getting more Asian Pacific Americans actors opportunities, spurred on by the 1989 Jonathan Pryce/Miss Saigon controversy.  And, more and more, they are working with actors with disabilities that confine them to wheelchairs, use canes, or who are blind or have other disabilities.




There are articles and interviews with all of the Special Tony Honorees at http://www.tonyawards.com/.  Congratulations to all!



Comments?  Leave one here, email me at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com or Tweet me!
Jeff
2.284

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

YouTube on Broadway: The 2011 Tony Nominees, Part IV: The Plays

As the hubbub surrounding the Tony Awards reaches its frenzied peak, let's take a final look at how shows are advertising themselves.  The previous three segments of this series focused on the Best Musical and Best Musical Revivals.  This final part will look at some of the ads for contenders in the Best Play.

Good People



This is an excellent clip, short and to the point.  Though the length is probably more economics-driven than an artistic choice, the creators of this managed artistry, anyway.  The show logo come to life, along with a snappy voice over that emphasizes the many facets of "good", and additional glimpses of homes that are clearly from opposite sides of the tracks combine to create interest and nail the central ideas and themes of the work.  And what a great way to set up the conflict between "the man" and "the woman."  It makes you want to see how it plays out.  Interesting, too, is that the voice is female...  Grade: A

Jerusalem


One can only imagine how difficult this must be to market to the general public.  The title probably has many a person thinking it has to do with the Middle East, religion, etc.  Not many people probably realize it has to do with Great Britain and its denizens, which is another hard sell if that fact is known.  Instead, the producers have chosen to use their 15 seconds to capture its surest audience, likely in hopes that they in turn will spread the news by word-of-mouth (how old-fashioned and effective).  And they go right for the jugular of die-hard play fans, using quotes exclusively from The New York Times, the only paper that counts among this group.  Then, it uses the quote about event theatre to seal the deal.  Add a great shot of an in character Mark Rylance, who any "smart" theatre goer knows, loves and talks about like they are friends of the guy.  A win in all ways for a play that must be a bitch to promote!  Grade: A-

The Motherfucker with the Hat



Talk about hard to promote - you can't even say the play's title aloud!  Again, a brief commercial that maximizes its seconds by emphasizing what is likely important to its target audience.  First, though all of the major cast members are shown, the only one mentioned in the voice over is Chris Rock.  The quotes emphasize the comic aspects of the show (I wonder how surprised some audience members are to find that it is serious, too).  And it makes sure to tell us that the show is short, and might be easier to sit through just in knowing that.  Throw in that the show is up for some Tonys and Mr. Rock's foray into theatre is all the more legit and might get a few more "regular" audience members, too.  Imagine how many more patrons they'd get if they could just say, "motherfucker!"  Grade: A

War Horse



(NOTE: This ad is for the West End production, but is identical to the version shown for the Lincoln Center production, substituting the Lincoln Center Theater in place of the New London Theatre.  I just couldn't get a decent version that adapts to this blog format.)

I think the ad speaks for itself, as it is carefully put together as the production is.  It nails the emotion - boy hugging horse, men marching at war, parents clutching each other with a letter in hand.  It nails the epic sweep of the staging - the horses, the tanks, the huge cast.  And it really hits home about those magnificent animals.  The voice over adds legitimacy, just in case one thinks they are seeing a children's book brought to life and nothing else.  And the images punctuated with reputable print quotes are the icing on the cake.  If you want to see the Broadway version, go to http://www.warhorseonbroadway.com/.  Grade: A+


Comments?  Leave one here, email me at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com or Tweet me!
Jeff
2.282

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Broadway Boys: Mr. June 2011: Seth Numrich

Mr. Broadway June 2011
Seth Numrich

WHY HE'S MR. JUNE:  It would be difficult to pick anyone who has had a better season than Seth Numrich.  He made his Broadway debut in The Merchant of Venice opposite acting legend Al Pacino, and followed it up with the lead role in the epic play, War Horse.  Add to that an upcoming film opening, the much-buzzed about Private Romeo.  But this latest acclaim should come of no surprise to anyone following his career since his graduation from Julliard, where he remains the youngest actor ever accepted to the school.  (He was 16!)  With good looks and a charming smile, he is able to carry off a variety of roles, and in the case of War Horse, a variety of ages, as well.  And so, Mr. Broadway June 2011 is a star on the rise; a young talent worth keeping an eye on for years to come.

INFO:
  • Currently appearing in: He stars as Albert Narracott in Lincoln Center Theater's production of War Horse.  He recently won the Dorothy Loudon Award from Theatre World.
  • Age: He is 24.
  • Other credits: Broadway: The Merchant of Venice; Off-Broadway and Regional: Blind (Rattlestick Theatre, 2010), On The Levee (LCT3, 2010), Dutch Masters (LAByrinth Theatre Company, 2010), Slipping (Rattlestick Theatre, 2009), Gates of Gold (59E59, 2009), Too Much Memory (4th Street Theatre, 2008), The Cure at Troy (Seattle Rep, 2008), Iphegenia 2.0 (Signature Theatre Company, 2007), The History Boys (Mark Taper Forum, 2007); TV and Film: Gravity (STARZ series), How to Kill a Mockingbird, Private Romeo.
  • Where to find him on the Internet: http://www.warhorseonbroadway.com/

IN PHOTOS:

Headshots/Magazine Photos






The History Boys





Iphegenia 2.0




The Cure at Troy




Slipping






Gravity




On the Levee




Blind






Private Romeo






Out Magazine
(with Matt Doyle, co-star Private Romeo and War Horse)





The Merchant of Venice






War Horse





ON VIDEO:
Featured in this spot for Lincoln Center's War Horse:
Interviewed in this spot for Lincoln Center's War Horse:
The trailer for Private Romeo (also featuring Matt Doyle):


Thanks, Mike, for your help in researching.
Comments?  Suggestions for future Mr or Ms Broadways?  Leave them here, email me at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com or Tweet me!
Jeff
2.275

Monday, May 30, 2011

Memorial Day on Broadway

For as long as drama has been around, the idea of war, and sometimes actual war, has been the subject of plays and musicals.  Often, the playwright's point of view is negative or anti-war; other times, the playwright seeks to glorify armed conflicts and raise the morale of a hurting nation.

Today, as we pause to reflect on those men and women lost or serving during our country's history of war around the world, I thought I might take a look at a few shows that depict some 20th Century conflicts.


World War I: War Horse

Even though this play depicts the Great War from the British perspective, it doesn't lessen the impact of the show on American audiences.  While it certainly brings up the question of duty, the idea of heroism, and the triumph of bravery, it seems pretty clear that the play is anti-war.  Nowhere is it more apparent than in the scenes where the direct impact of battle on innocent citizenry is depicted.  The terror of foreign invaders, literally in one's front yard is, vividly depicted.  The show also addresses the modernization of warfare, with vivid reenactments of trench warfare and the roll of tanks through the battlefields at the expense of men on foot and the titular war horses.  And one cannot dismiss the equal treatment the play gives to the German soldiers, who are as angry, spent and grieving as the British.  Everyone and no one are heroes in War Horse.

The valiant and brave are depicted in this show by the characters Joey and Topthorn (war horses), Billy Narracott, Albert Narracott and Frederich Muller.

Other plays that deal with WWI: Journey's End


World War II: South Pacific

This glorious musical depicts a wide range of people brought together by World War II, with a decidedly pro-American bent.  That is not to say that the show is pro-war; no one, living or dead, leaves this paradise unchanged.  But consider how soon after the war was over that the show made its debut, and you'll understand the pro-American sentiment.  This show gives it to us from all angles: the common enlisted men, trying to keep some semblance of normalcy in the midst of life and death chaos; the military leadership, who at the brink of a possible turning point are forced to make very difficult and life-changing decisions; the war hero, fed up with war, who in one last burst of duty loses his life; and in a rare case, the show depicts women at war, the nurses who must balance duty with the unspoken need for romance, mothering and friendship in a man's world.

Among those veterans depicted: Ensign Nellie Forbush, Lieutenant Joseph Cable, Seabee Luther Billis.

Other shows that deal with WWII: On the Town, Biloxi Blues, Bent, The Diary of Anne Frank, The People in the Picture


Vietnam: Miss Saigon

This mega-musical is decidedly anti-American and, ultimately, anti-war.  It brutally - and realistically - depicts the seedier side of the American participation in this conflict, with soldiers using and abusing young Vietnamese girls forced into a life of poverty.  The commercialization/Americanization of the war really gets some attention with The Engineer doing his best businessman routine to capitalize on the conflict and make his fortune before the world around him collapses, and later tries to escape to the very place he mocks in "The American Dream."  Then, too, is the cut-your-losses-and-run recreation of the Americans leaving the embassy and the war torn nation altogether.  The consequences of war are also brought to bear with "Bui Doi," the thousands of children fathered by American soldiers and left behind.  By giving it to us from all sides, the creators of the show certainly are making a statement about war,

Among those veterans depicted are American soldiers John and Chris.

Another show that depicts the Vietnam Conflict: Hair

****
Whether one is pro or anti war, one cannot escape the fact that eventually all armed conflicts become ingrained in the culture of our society.  And as long as there is war and theatre, the two will forever be entwined.


For my grandfather who served in the Pacific during World War II, and my uncle who served in Vietnam.
Jeff
2.273

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

REVIEW: War Horse

Review of the May 14 matinee performance. At the Vivian Beaumont Theatre at Lincoln Center on Broadway, New York City. 2 hours, 45 minutes, including an intermission. A National Theatre of Great Britain Production.  Starring Seth Numrich, Matt Doyle, Peter Hermann, T. Ryder Smith, Boris McGiver, Alyssa Bresnahan, Stephen Plunkett and Madeleine Rose Yen. Based upon the novel by Michael Morpurgo.  Adapted by Nick Stafford in association with the Handspring Puppet Company. Puppet design, fabrication and direction by Adrian Kohler with Basil Jones for the Handspring Puppet Company. Direction by Marianne Elliott and Tom Morris.

Grade: A+

Every time I go to a new production, I hope that it will be an exhilarating, indescribable experience.  Many times, I am exhilarated.  Many times, the experience is indescribable (about 50-50, good-bad).  But it is ever so rare that a theatrical experience leaves me breathless, spent emotionally, and a somehow changed human being from the one I was before the house lights dimmed and a brand new world of human drama unfolded before me.  Until this past Saturday, I could count only four such times in more than a quarter century of theatre going.  The fifth, War Horse, leaves me now, days later, shaking and teary even as I type this, simply at the memory of the event.

The War Horses: Topthorn and Joey

Much has been made of the life-size and life-like horse puppets so stunningly created by The Handspring Puppet Company, and every bit of the praise they have received is warranted.  Pictures simply do not do them justice.  They have elevated stage puppetry to heights unseen since the debut of The Lion King.  Visually, they amaze, amuse and awe.  But perhaps most awesome of all is that once you get used to the way the puppets are manipulated - by three or four puppeteers per "horse" - slowly but surely your mind erases their presence and you start to believe that these are living, breathing beasts, with as much personality and emotional conflict as any of the humans on stage.  Better yet, you stop thinking of them as puppets and go along for the ride as it were.  And for as much accolade, again all deserved, that the puppetry has received, it speaks volumes for the whole production that they are only a part of the entire glorious experience.

Set in Europe during World War I, the play is not so much about the horse and the boy who lovingly and naively follows him into battle, as it is about war itself.  Here we have the ultimate showdown - animal versus machine - in a war that would forever change the way wars are fought.  One side brings the ultimate weapon, a well-trained hand-to-hand combat cavalry; the other brings the new ultimate, machine guns and tanks, not to mention tear gas, trench warfare and the first air support.  It is the pinnacle of the battle between old and new.  And the show depicts these events with frightening clarity and sweeping, breathtaking theatricality.  It is without embarrassment that I confide that I wept openly as horses got tangled in barbed wire, soldiers and their mounts were slain by artillery and gigantic tanks.  I was not alone in weeping for what was lost, but also for the sheer magnitude of the bad that mankind can do to itself.  We are our own worst enemy, and for that I cried like a baby.


(Top) The British Cavalry charges
(Bottom) The German tanks advance

It is a rare thing to see war depicted, though, from both sides of the battlefield.  And it is humbling and embarrassing to think that every single time we are thrust into another global conflict, neither side ever stops to think about the lives at stake or how the people who are actually doing the fighting feel about whatever the battle is about - if they even know.  In War Horse, all of the usual platitudes are used to justify fighting - for the honor of the king, to help our neighbors, and to stave off the enemy from taking away our land and rights.  But what it all really boils down to is quite simple: we fight for causes we do not understand, for leaders who tell us what to do but not why, and that no one on the battlefield wants to die, cause or no cause.  Rarely, though, does any medium portray those parallels of emotion and purpose equally for both sides.  Act one sets up the English side of the war, while act two spends the majority of its time being told from the German side.  It is shameful that it should come as any measure of surprise that the Englishmen and the Germans both hate the war as much as they don't hate the warriors fighting it.  In an absolutely stunningly staged scene in act two, we see two opposing trenches at once, with "no man's land" in between.  Humanity wins out over barbarism as both sides come together to perform a rescue that will forever change the lives of the men in both trenches. 

Two lives saved: Joey and Friedrich (Peter Hermann)

No point of view is left unexamined, even the innocent casualties of war - women and children thrust into battle simply because their home is in the way.  A particularly moving scene takes place between a French woman, her daughter, Emilie, and a German soldier who must commandeer their farm for a triage center (Cat Walleck, Madeleine Rose Yen and Peter Hermann, respectively).  Often these types of scenes involve the predetermined hero, not the bad guy Germans, but this play forces one to see things from the other side frequently and relentlessly.  Watching the German try to justify and apologize to the mother, and later try to restore a sense of hope in the child is moving enough, but ultimately watching that same child bravely face many soldiers with guns in defense of a man who should be her enemy is among the most moving moments of my theatre-going life. 

It is that same extremity of situation that propels the unlikely central story of a boy, his horse, and a several years long journey across a war-torn continent in pursuit of that horse.  The sheer magnitude of World War I and the overwhelming statistics of mortality amongst men and beasts make the likelihood of the boy and horse reuniting seem beyond impossible.  But just as the reality of this tale threatens to bog you down emotionally, you can't help but root for the impossible to happen, anyway.  Whether the impossible does or does not happen, I won't spoil here.  But I will say it is only in the very last seconds of the performance that you find out - this show is a heart pounding ride to the very end.

The puppets aside, Marianne Elliott and Tom Morris have directed this moving tale with such a simplicity and directness that one imagines it would be just as superb on an empty stage, everyone in black and with only mere suggestions of the title character.  The lack of scenery only adds to the grand scale of a play that takes us all over Europe over several years.  A few simple props, moody, effective lighting (by Paule Constable), and a large cast of characters who play roles on both sides, differentiated by their costumes (designed along with the setting and drawings that are projected by Rae Smith) all converge to tell this sweeping tale by focusing us on the people and not the spectacle.  Don't get me wrong, it is a visual feast of theatrical tableau, ever changing perspective and all on a scale that makes Les Miserables look down-right dinky.  But it never overwhelms the story.


A giant torn scrap of paper (so important to the story that to tell why would give away too much) dominates the vast black space of the stage.  On it, we see the sketches drawn by an English Officer, as they evolve from pastoral countrysides to war ravaged towns as the years tick by.  At times, the images are animated so as to give us a sense of how the still life actually was anything but.  The projections by 59 Productions take the use of such a medium on the stage to an entirely new level of sophistication and, perhaps surprisingly, subtlety, for as enormous as this is, it grabs our attention, but doesn't overwhelm the story being told.

Song man and woman: Liam Robinson and Kate Pfafel

The cast of 35 is, to a person, superb.  And while I'd love to single each and everyone out, I will concentrate on the main company or principal roles.  At any given performance a team of 13 actors portray the horses, and a certain very funny goose.  These people are no less than brilliant, so much do they bring to the whole piece.  Liam Robinson and Kate Pfafel are the song man and woman, who provide songs which provide mood and add much to the change in time and place.

I mentioned previously the French mother and daughter, Emilie, played to perfection by Cat Walleck and Madeleine Rose Yen.  Miss Yen's performance, I think, will haunt me for years; such hysterical pleading and such honest emotion are so rarely successfully portrayed by adult actors, let alone such a very young lady.  As the British lieutenant who brings Joey (the war horse of the title) into the war, Stephen Plunkett, delivers a sharp performance that walks the line between soldier and caring human being.  The same can be said for his German counterpart, as played by Peter Hermann.  Mr. Hermann's performance is another marvel of economy punctuated by poignant gestures and rapid fire outbursts, as he tries to hide his identity and save his own life.  David Pegram as Albert's best friend in the trenches offers several very welcomed light moments, making his demise all the more upsetting.

David Pegram, Seth Numrich, Joey,
Topthorn, Madeleine Rose Yen and Peter Hermann

War is certainly hell in War Horse, but home life isn't all that much better, as sacrifices are continually made just for a community to survive.  And no one in the central family disappoints, either.  Matt Doyle (Spring Awakening, Bye Bye Birdie) gives his most mature performance to date as the cocky cousin of the hero of the story.  He sees war as just another thing you do to keep the family name in good stead, a trait drilled into him by his father (gamely played by T. Ryder Smith), a former war hero, who never lets anyone forget that he is a veteran, as he limps around town wearing his medals and lording over everyone.  When push comes to shove, however, the son doesn't exactly follow in the father's brave footsteps.  The main family is as broken as the community in which it lives, as they struggle to make ends meet.  The father, ruggedly played by Boris McGiver, is the one who stayed behind during the last war, an embarrassment to the family, even though his actions on the home front kept the family home in the family.  The result of such public and familial scorn makes him turn to drink, and as the town drunk, little is expected and little is what he delivers.  Alyssa Bresnahan, as the long-suffering wife and mother, bravely keeps things going, even as she has to be the one to beg the bank not to take her home away, all while she struggles to raise her son, Albert.


(Top) Matt Doyle and T. Ryder Smith
(Bottom) Alyssa Bresnahan and Boris McGiver

In what is a brilliant performance of epic scale, just like the play itself, Seth Numrich offers one of the finest portrayals I have ever seen on the Broadway stage.  As Albert, he ages several years, from an awkward, out of place teen to a soldier of remarkable courage.  His role is a complex one, as he must navigate a world war, a broken family and a love for his horse that in lesser hands would seem so improbable that the audience might just check out on his story.  Instead, he brings dignity to a child role that is so rarely present in modern drama, and a strength of character that is clearly all due to internal control, so pitiful is his parental example.  Mr. Numrich, like the play itself, unabashedly wears his heart on his sleeve for the love of his life, the horse Joey.  Just remembering him yell plaintively in the darkness of many a lonely night, "Joey!  Joey, boy, are you there?" brings me to tears.  But, again like the play itself, it is the other events in his life - running away from home, the loss of comrades in arms, and his own near death experience - that build character and subtly change him from boy to man before our very eyes.  His is a stunning, heartbreaking performance.

A boy and his horse:
Seth Numrich and Joey

Really, it is that very co-existence of epic scale of war and the very human scale of life that rules every aspect of this once-in-a-lifetime production.  Whether it is the staging of an entire mounted cavalry unit charging into barbed wire, or a quiet moment between a boy and his horse learning to trust each other, or a fully staged combat scene or a simpler moment between friends in the trenches, War Horse succeeds in a grand way.  War is hell, indeed, but humanity and the spirit of loving something bigger than yourself, is divine.

(Photos by Paul Kolnik)


Comments?  Leave one here, email me at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com or Tweet me.
Jeff
2.260