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    Review: In ‘The Perplexed,’ Moral Gridlock on Fifth Avenue

    Plenty of plays, from “Hamlet” to “Hamilton,” feature a restless title character itching for action. But “The Perplexed,” which opened on Tuesday at New York City Center Stage I, has six — and that’s not even counting the audience.In any case, six are way too many for Richard Greenberg’s hermetic family comedy, a modest story inflated to unwarranted size by what appears to be dramaturgical panic. “The Perplexed,” directed by Lynne Meadow for Manhattan Theater Club, wants so much to be important that it forgets to be plausible first.Or even followable; despite its generous running time and exhausting exposition, in which characters tell each other things they would already know, the play is mysterious to the point of perversity. You will hear dozens of disquisitions, in rich prose, on the moral gridlock of privileged people who can’t think of anything to do that won’t make the world worse. Yet you will barely grasp the basic architecture of their relationships.Those relationships are as bewildering as Santo Loquasto’s floor plan for the vast library, complete with endless niches and nooks, of the Fifth Avenue apartment in which the play is set. The owner is a hateful magnate named Berland Stahl, on whom evil has acted as a preservative. Though ancient, he is said to have “missed his window” for dying.Wouldn’t it have been fun, and dramatically useful, to meet him? But no, that would provide too clear an antagonist for a conflict that is built on internal muddle. Instead, assembled for a “Potemkin wedding” in the old man’s home, we meet — and meet and meet — the once-close but now long-warring families of the bride, Isabelle Stahl, who is Berland’s granddaughter, and the groom, Caleb Resnik. Friends in infancy, these idealistic yet cleareyed 20-somethings have been brought back together by fate, a force that Greenberg, in one of his overpolished quips, calls “coincidence with a publicist.”The adults, though, are mostly a mess. It’s not just the feud, which has something to do with a slumlord lawsuit once brought against Berland by Caleb’s father, Ted Resnik, and by Isabelle’s mother, Evy Arlen-Stahl, who is married to Berland’s son, Joseph. The suit, which failed, got Evy and Joseph written out of the old man’s will but in the process made Evy’s career; she’s now a crusading New York City councilwoman. It also, somehow, for a time, ruined Ted’s life.Or so I think; even after reading the play, which went through a lot of rewriting during previews, I cannot explain how being on the same side of the conflict provoked so much hostility from Ted’s wife, Natalie Hochberg-Resnik. (She is a familiar type in Greenberg’s plays: the passive-aggressive Jewish dilettante do-gooder.) Nor do we ever fully understand the nature of the trauma afflicting Joseph, who spends much of the play, when not in a stupor, drafting horribly inappropriate father-of-the-bride speeches. One is from the point-of-view of a fetus.That the wedding will take place at midnight — after the cocktails, dinner and dancing — is a laughable device justified lamely and late in the play. Likewise the crisis, such as it is, is resolved with a ludicrous technological trick.Fair enough; this is a comedy, after all. Plot contrivance is the name of the game.But character contrivance is deadly; too much makes a play’s engine start kicking and stalling. Isabelle’s brother, Micah, a medical student with a sideline in gay fetish porn, has no function except to heighten the hysteria. (He has recently been outed as a star of PrepBoyz.com.) Patricia Persaud, Berland’s Guyanese-born health attendant, has more of a role in the proceedings, but mostly exists to provide person-of-color contrast to the white characters by enjoying her work and smiling incessantly.If Greenberg were directly exploring socioeconomic privilege, would that be palatable? In any case, he’s not; he’s exploring instead the privilege of narcissism. The self-regarding adults, caught in the gap between the certainties of an older generation’s brutality and a younger one’s impatience for change, are free to spend their lives dithering and whining and finding excuses for themselves.So if they are perplexed, it is not in the theological manner suggested by the 12th-century tract from which Greenberg takes his title. In “The Guide to the Perplexed,” Maimonides sought to explain the nature of God; these characters barely believe in their own existence, let alone a deity’s. Even the rabbi, a family friend named Cyrus Bloom, is “self-defrocked,” another victim of moral restlessness.It’s not hard to spot Greenberg’s own perplexity here; three of his characters have writer’s block. James, Evy’s brother, is a novelist who has given up writing altogether. “It seems I’ve completed my trajectory,” he says. “From promising to successful to very successful to less successful to still less successful to a dismal sales track to being my sales track to goodbye.”It’s probably no coincidence that this character, though functionless in the plot, is the one who can’t stop talking about its themes. He asks how people no longer at the center of the culture can still do meaningful work. Evy, a public servant, at least gets stoplights installed at dangerous intersections. What can a formerly edgy, then mainstream, then beached writer do?If this is Greenberg’s plaint as well — the scent of despair does waft off the stage — I hope he has now worked through it. His career has been full of ups and downs; Manhattan Theater Club has produced 10 of his more than 30 plays, some bombs, some (like “The Assembled Parties,” in 2013) stunners. His best work doesn’t wallow, it strides, making no apologies for a style that is lofty, literary and unafraid of long trips around the barn to get to the point.“The Perplexed” feels needlessly ashamed of all that. It participates in James’s loathing for himself and his class — “The people I know congratulate themselves if they cope with a sad feeling” — yet ultimately lets them off the hook. The production is left to distract by ingratiation, with its comedy rhythms and clarinetty music. Even so, the cast, headed by the piquant Margaret Colin as Evy, can’t find a tone that works, though the always-ferocious Frank Wood, as Joseph, gets his teeth into some pathos and doesn’t let go.“The Perplexed” as a whole lacks the muscle for that. It might have worked better if it hadn’t tried so hard to be a major denunciation (and yet a loving excuse for) an entitled generation. The ambition is admirable, but a play can’t follow every road open to it. Sometimes installing a stoplight at a single intersection is the best thing anyone can do.The PerplexedTickets Through March 29 at New York City Center Stage I, Manhattan; 212-581-1212, manhattantheatreclub.com. Running time: 2 hours 45 minutes. More

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    ‘Coal Country’ Review: Songs and Stories in a Disaster’s Aftermath

    At the very beginning of the new play “Coal Country,” we are told it is “a West Virginia story about 29 men and a big machine.” This is an understated way to inform the audience that what follows will be devastating.That story is true, and it happened in 2010, when those men all died in a devastating mining disaster. We learn a few things about some of the victims: that Cory was 5 when his dad took him out to shoot his first deer, and that Greg had been Patti’s neighbor for 22 years before he asked her out.But really, we don’t know all that much about those folks because the show is about the ones who were left behind: It’s Cory’s father, Tommy (Michael Laurence), who recounts that hunt, and it’s Patti (Mary Bacon) who talks about Greg’s courtship. Memories and grief are what they have now.Anger, too. Jessica Blank and Erik Jensen’s “Coal Country,” with live music by the rootsy singer-songwriter Steve Earle, is also about why what happened at the Upper Big Branch mine can be called a tragedy, but it can’t be called an accident. A terrible twist of fate defines an accident. What happened at U.B.B., as everybody calls it, was precipitated by greed and cost-saving negligence — embodied by Don Blankenship, the chief executive of the company that owned the mine, and whose trial figures in the show. Conditions had gotten so bad that months before the explosion, an experienced miner named Goose (Michael Gaston) had told his wife, Mindi (Amelia Campbell), that U.B.B. was “a ticking time bomb.”To assemble the script, Blank (who also directed) and Jensen traveled to West Virginia and conducted interviews with people who had lost loved ones that day in 2010. The couple are experienced practitioners of documentary theater, as evidenced in shows such as “The Exonerated” (about former death-row inmates, and in which Earle once appeared) and “Aftermath” (about Iraqi refugees living in Jordan). The testimonies in “Coal Country,” at the Public Theater, have a lean plainness that only makes them more heart-wrenching.The characters talk about their relationship with the dead, but also their relationship with the mine, which regulates everybody’s life. Driving to his day shift in the dispatch office, Roosevelt (Ezra Knight) would see his dad returning from his night shift underground. Then one day, the younger man did not pass his father’s car coming from the other direction; when he got to the mine, he learned his father had died. While coal mining has become a hot-button issue, from environmental concerns to political debates, the play offers gentle reminders that options are limited for many folks who were attached to their town and didn’t want to move. “People say why don’t you just quit, I’d rather work at McDonald’s and make $9 an hour,” Mindi says. “But you don’t understand, there weren’t no McDonald’s. Only jobs in this area are coal-related.”Yet the show is not blind to fault lines within a community that is closing ranks and shunning some of its own if they are deemed not working-class enough. Judy (Deirdre Madigan) may have lost a brother in the mine, but she feels estranged waiting for updates with other members of the community because she is a doctor. “There’s a class division,” she says. “For the first time in my life I was an outsider.”Earle’s songs (which will appear on his new album, “Ghosts of West Virginia,” due in May) are interspersed through the show at regular intervals. He performs them sitting on a stool, hunched over an old-fashioned microphone; the actors often join in.The spare numbers do not pretend to offer insights into the characters or move the story along: This is not a musical. Rather, they underline the show’s themes of community and transmission, contributing one more chapter in what feels like an ongoing oral history.This, after all, is the role music has played in Appalachia for generations. In “Coal Country,” the testimonies and songs cohere into a narrative of timeless exploitation, resistance and tragedy. Tellingly, the first number is about West Virginia’s most famous folk hero: “John Henry was a steel drivin’ man,” Earle sings. “Beat the steam drill down and then he died/And it didn’t change nothin’ but heaven knows he tried.”He tried, and he died. As for Blankenship, he was sentenced to one year in prison in 2016. Now, he is a presidential candidate for the Constitution Party.Coal CountryTickets Through April 5 at the Public Theater, Manhattan; 212-967-7555, publictheater.org. Running time: 1 hour 30 minutes. More

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    London’s ‘Cyrano,’ With James McAvoy, Is Headed to BAM

    The Jamie Lloyd Company’s West End revival of “Cyrano de Bergerac” is coming to the Harvey Theater of the Brooklyn Academy of Music for a limited run in May. Directed by the theater company’s namesake, Jamie Lloyd, the adaptation by Martin Crimp is a postmodern take on the Edmond Rostand love story, featuring beatboxing, silver-tongued characters in street clothes.“It’s not the most difficult role I’ve played onstage but I would say it’s the trickiest,” said James McAvoy, who plays the title role and was nominated for a best actor Olivier Award for it on Tuesday. “While its themes and narrative are universal, Rostand sets it in a heightened world where language and oratory ability are as powerful as weapons.”The classic version follows Cyrano, played by McAvoy, who is smitten with Roxane, played by Anita-Joy Uwajeh, but convinced he is too unattractive to win her affection. Instead, he helps the better-looking but inarticulate Christian, played by Eben Figueiredo, find the words to woo her. As the audiences will discover, the love triangle in this production has a modern twist to it.(The production also received Olivier nominations for best revival, best director and for best supporting actress, for Michele Austin.)“Jamie wanted us to be true to ourselves as much as possible,” McAvoy said in an interview. “In some way I feel as though I’m playing myself more than some idea of Cyrano and I suspect many of the cast feel the same way.”“So how will the American crowd take to that?” In Britain, he said, people “seemed to eat it up, so hopefully we’ll find the same thing at BAM.”The play is scheduled to run from May 8 through May 31. Tickets go on sale for members on March 10 and for the general public on March 20. More

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    ‘Incantata’ Review: An Elegy in Words, Video and Potatoes

    Even the word sounds spellbinding: “Incantata” is Italian for “enchantment.”Leave it to the Pulitzer Prize-winning Irish poet Paul Muldoon, in his poem-turned-play of that name, to use all the linguistic tools at his disposal to remind us that the sumptuousness of language is as much a matter of sound as of meaning.“Incantata,” which appears in Muldoon’s 1994 collection “The Annals of Chile,” is an elegy to his partner, Mary Farl Powers, a noted printmaker who died two years earlier. Remembrances of their time together are twined with allusions to Greek and Irish mythology, popular music (Vivaldi to Frankie Valli) and “Waiting for Godot.”In the Irish Repertory Theater’s heady and demanding production of the same name, the veteran actor Stanley Townsend is the unnamed speaker of the poem, reciting it to a video camera as a message to a lost love. (The hourlong show, a U.S. premiere, originated at the Galway International Arts Festival.)Recites, however, is the wrong word, reserved for a library or classroom; Townsend proclaims and concedes, utters and professes. Under Sam Yates’s direction, he is constantly in motion, utilizing the whole of the stage. Swift shifts in lighting and video projections of his anguished face, projected on the back wall, provide ample planes through which to reflect the various dimensions of the poem.There’s the romance of quiet scenes, when Townsend pauses between stanzas, simply looking up at the whisper of light streaming in from a high vent, as if seeing a familiar ghost. (Paul Keogan did the lighting.) Then moments of tumult, when the actor erupts in a frenzied dance to a Blondie song or fitfully flings buckets of paint onto the walls.Ultimately, Muldoon’s writing is more rooted on the page, where its coy references and ludic associative leaps can be contemplated slowly. The stage, for all the liveliness it breathes into the text, is not as amenable.Between the speaker’s direct reckonings with his grief (“I thought of you again tonight, thin as a rake”) are oceans of verbal bric-a-brac, tickles to the ear and intellect, but hard to grasp.Muldoon wrote “Incantata” in conversation with some of his other poetry. Though the minute details of this exercise are lost on the stage, other formal elements of the work, like repetition and sound play, are still arresting and profound.And for those able to pay close enough attention, the play is full of lyrical rewards: “You must have heard the music/rise from the muddy ground between/your breasts as a nocturne,” Townsend rhapsodizes at one point.Yet there’s a tension between the strict formal architecture and the unfettered content. We are asked to consider whether the logic of an art form can capture the illogicality of grief: “I thought again of how art may be made,” the man says.We see him doing just that: obsessively cutting up and dipping potatoes in paint, stamping them onto scrolls of paper. Rosanna Vize’s set design, a cluttered art space with prints featuring the same pattern littering the walls, embodies the attempt to combat chaos by creating meaning.“Incantata” is unique and beautiful, but undeniably complex. The poem is worth reading, for sure, but its life onstage has a peculiar charm, a touch of magic.IncantataThrough March 15 at Irish Repertory Theater, Manhattan; 212-727-2737, irishrep.org. Running time: 1 hour. More

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    The Bard of American Privilege

    IT’S COMMON PRACTICE, though often somewhat unspoken, that when a seminal playwright learns that one of his older, popular works will see a major theatrical revival, he might revise — or update entirely — his original script, finding all the places where the plot’s mechanisms, characters’ speaking patterns or writer’s attempts at humor or historical context have been rendered obsolete. But when the American playwright Richard Greenberg learned last year that Second Stage Theater on Broadway would be mounting his 2002 play “Take Me Out” — about a fictional New York baseball legend named Darren Lemming who comes out as gay, to the confusion and sometimes disgust of his occasionally naked teammates (the primary setting is their locker room) — Greenberg, 62, decided there was no use trying to modernize it in advance of its April premiere.When Greenberg first wrote the play, he intended it to presage an event that he had long anticipated as both a gay man himself and as a fanatical fan of the sport: the announcement by an active Major League player that he was gay. Some two decades later, that still hasn’t happened, which makes “Take Me Out” less of a period piece than might be presumed — and thus, more urgent now than when it was conceived. These contemporary implications extend beyond the rarefied realm of professional sports, for the story also includes an anxious accountant named Mason Marzac who is learning to harness his own sexuality as a cis white suit, a different kind of coming out that is more meaningful today for its subtlety. Yet to a new generation, that type of gay angst risks seeming anachronistic, and so before the director Scott Ellis signed on to the revival in 2016, he organized a reading of “Take Me Out” to ensure it still felt relevant. Four years later, Ellis thinks that the play is even timelier than it was, given the current administration’s “support,” he says, of the racism and homophobia that the story explores.Revisited today, the deeper truth of Greenberg’s script also lies in its overarching metaphor, wherein baseball isn’t just a popular pastime but a stand-in for a particularly American kind of mythmaking. In the first act, Mason explains in a monologue why he has come to appreciate the game that he’s been introduced to by his new client, Darren:And baseball is better than Democracy — or at least than Democracy as it’s practiced in this country — because unlike Democracy, baseball acknowledges loss.While conservatives tell you, leave things alone and no one will lose, and liberals tell you, interfere a lot and no one will lose, baseball says: Someone will lose. Not only says it — insists upon it!This speech goes on for a few pages, and it’s some of Greenberg’s strongest writing: clever and cleareyed, displaying the kind of flamboyant wit and wry affect that, early in his career, earned him the distinction of being called an “American Noël Coward,” after the early 20th-century British playwright and actor known for his gymnastic prose and upper-class affiliations. But to Greenberg, that comparison has always felt like false equivalency, a naïve supposition about the people he was chronicling — and the behavior he was lampooning, particularly among urban cultural elites — since his professional debut, “The Bloodletters,” premiered at Ensemble Studio Theater in 1984.ImageThe Broadway program for “Eastern Standard” (1988).ImageThe Broadway program for “Take Me Out” (2003).“NOËL COWARD’S FANTASTIC, but all I could think was: What’s the use of having an American one?” Greenberg says to me one afternoon in December from across a vinyl booth at Chelsea’s Rail Line Diner, the playwright’s de facto office. In person, his round face and pale, swooping crest of hair suggest a kind of aged version of Philip Seymour Hoffman, especially Hoffman as Truman Capote, whom the actor played in the 2005 biopic. Greenberg adapted Capote’s 1958 novella, “Breakfast at Tiffany’s,” into a Broadway play in 2013, but the similarities between the two gay men have less to do with their characters’ lyricism and their glamorous-but-intellectual mise-en-scène — one full of massive Manhattan homes and the rich people who inhabit them — than the way Greenberg goes about his life: The only guests allowed in his duplex apartment, where he’s lived alone, across the street from the diner, for 15 years, seem to be the few close female friends for whom he enjoys cooking elaborate dinners. Chief among them is the actress Patricia Clarkson — one of Greenberg’s “swans,” as Clarkson has referred to these women — who graduated from Yale’s School of Drama with him in the ’80s and has remained in communication ever since, occasionally interrupting our diner conversation by texting photographs of her niece’s toddler.“I don’t know why America would have a Noël Coward — it just seems culturally inappropriate,” Greenberg continues after cooing over the child on his phone screen. “And then you think, ‘Well, how can I be less like that today?’” Not unlike one of his characters, he’s now midway through a long monologue about something someone said about his aesthetic decades ago, but the point lingers long after he’s caught his breath: Greenberg isn’t interested in his work sounding or feeling like any of his forebears, legendary as they may be. Nor is he invested in chasing trends: not structural trickery, or set-driven surprise, or audience participation or any other innovations currently informing the theater; instead, he remains a realist, a classicist driven by story above all, mostly because, he says, “It’s possible to be stunningly derivative trying to do something other people are doing.” And despite being one of America’s most established playwrights, having had around 30 shows either on or off Broadway staged in the past four decades, he’s also not really concerned with repeating any of his trademark flourishes. “What I don’t see is someone relying on what’s worked in the past,” says the actress Maddie Corman, who in 2016 appeared in Greenberg’s “The Babylon Line” at Lincoln Center Theater. “Richard is someone whose work is always pushing forward, which is rare. Once you’ve become successful at something, people have expectations — and I don’t think he cares about that.”Indeed, in an era when some playwrights have become as famous as the actors in their casts, when the experience of going to the theater, the whole Instagram-the-Playbill moment of it all, is often just as motivating to ticket buyers as the play itself, Greenberg remains one of the few dramatists who’s remained relevant simply for what he’s put on the page. Though he’s workshopped new pieces often, several directors and actors told me that he doesn’t meddle too much in the casting or the staging; in fact, he goes to rehearsals only begrudgingly. Instead, he sends copious notes, and his scripts’ stage directions communicate his intentions. These parentheticals are typically among his most evocative lines; a memorable example from “Take Me Out” goes: “Anyway, those Greeks … they … (i.e.: were big faggots). And they created … (He makes a big circular gesture with his arms to indicate ‘civilization and stuff’).” Greenberg also has never written for streaming television, which, crowded with well-spoken, almost implausibly quick-witted characters, is undoubtedly indebted to his plays, whether it’s HBO’s “Succession” or Apple’s “The Morning Show.” And given his decades of output, relatively few of his plays have seen a revival, partly because he feels that certain lines reek too embarrassingly of youth.In that sense, even the political undertones of “Take Me Out” now feel archaic, which is why the only change he insisted upon was that the production take place not in the present, which is how it was originally written, but sometime in the mid-90s, when Greenberg was actually conceiving the play. “Before this came together, I was looking forward to that democracy monologue as something that marked how different things were between that time and now. But it’s just incomprehensible: forces — anger, for instance — exist now that didn’t exist then,” he says. “I like things that alert us to how different the past was as opposed to how similar.”IF THERE ISN’T a certain kind of Greenberg play, there is a certain kind of Greenberg voice, often personified by a well-educated, somewhat snobbish, maybe multigenerationally rich or at least upwardly mobile New Yorker who speaks as fast as a character in an Aaron Sorkin drama and is a little mean, perhaps a bit tipsy, somewhat disappointed with the direction their life has taken — the sheer sluggishness of middle age — but fully cognizant of the fact that they have it (comparatively) good, self-aware in the sense that they know whatever they’re saying is, invariably, funny and smart and sad. Often a single line can convey all three of those emotions at once. In 1988, when “Eastern Standard” first landed the playwright on Broadway, his characters would have been called yuppies, and Greenberg their foremost chronicler; since then, many theatergoers have taken to calling them — and Greenberg — “privileged,” a word that the playwright himself avoids, even as it’s become common American vernacular.Greenberg, like many of his characters, grew up in the shadow and thrall of New York City, in East Meadow, Long Island, the younger son of a homemaker, Shirley, and a movie-theater executive, Leon, alongside his older brother, Edward, an investment banker. The playwright got an undergraduate degree in English at Princeton, then headed to Harvard to pursue a doctorate in English literature but dropped out and transferred to Yale’s playwriting program after submitting a script he wrote while cutting class. As a younger man, though, Greenberg harbored a fantasy of being an architect because, as he recalls, “The people on Long Island used to go on weekends to model houses and dream about a better space.”In “Eastern Standard” — which pits four striving urbanites against one another’s romantic advances, career complacency, gentrification, a naïve waitress, a grifting homeless woman and the shame and tragedy of AIDS-era Manhattan — it’s perhaps no coincidence that the central action revolves around the Hamptons home of a suicidal architect named Stephen Wheeler. By act two, he’s quit his job at a prestigious Manhattan firm and, drunk on wine during a dinner party with his friends, goes on a shouty tirade that encapsulates Greenberg’s skill at leavening seriousness with absurdity, crafting plays that are neither comedies nor dramas but both: “I’m free. No more — building ziggurats on Third Avenue! No more — acts of — edificary warfare against Manhattan!” Stephen begins. “And we’ll live like the disgusting rich — and we’ll drink till we puke — and have plastic surgery.” Finally, despite his friends’ protestations, Stephen finishes by both debasing and celebrating himself: “I am going to sound like such a … such a … the ultimate bleeding-heart liberal … How do you like that — I’m 30 and I’ve finally acquired politics!”According to the actress Kate Arrington, who’s appeared in five of Greenberg’s plays, such two-faced people are a thrill for actors to embody — “Your mind is working as quickly as your character’s, and you wish you could respond [in real life] with such grace,” she says — and for ticket buyers to witness. “Every single line can be a laugh line,” Arrington says, “flexing those muscles that most playwrights just don’t have, but also incorporating … real existential terror.” In an essay he wrote nearly a decade ago, Greenberg compared sitting in a theater to a “hostage situation”; he believes that a play that’s not entertaining is ultimately a failed play.To many theater nerds, “Eastern Standard” is a riot, the kind of literature that makes them want to flee their small towns and move to Manhattan. It’s not merely funny, though. It’s also one of the earliest Broadway plays that put AIDS on the stage, written from within the crisis, in the years when more political shows like Larry Kramer’s “The Normal Heart” (1985) were mostly relegated to downtown. “Eastern Standard” was also one of the first plays to treat gayness with a kind of benign, straight-adjacent regularity that we take for granted today but that had, at the time, evaded the pioneering, altogether campier queer works that preceded it in New York, including Mart Crowley’s “The Boys in the Band” (1968) and Harvey Fierstein’s “Torch Song Trilogy” (1982). To some, though, Greenberg’s intentionally ridiculous play failed to treat the HIV epidemic with the appropriate gravitas — a criticism taken seriously by the playwright himself, who has blocked it from being revived on Broadway. “There’s something that I now recognize as being symptomatic of a young playwright: that a premise would do the work,” he says. “And for me, the premise was deliberately incongruous: I was taking all of this mayhem that was going on at the time and putting it in a clearly inappropriate format.” To him, the most successful works are those that ring true when they premiere and then eventually become not “dated” but “period,” particularly when viewed in contrast with the present. “I want the plays to be both contemporary and time capsules,” he says.Following the attention from “Eastern Standard,” Greenberg decided it would be best to just stay home. “He got penalized by that word ‘prolific,’ used in a pejorative way, and that was the turning point,” says the actor and director Joe Mantello, who staged the original “Take Me Out” and several subsequent Greenberg plays. Over the years, the playwright has often been called reclusive — “A Dramatic Shut-In” was the hyperbolic title of Alex Witchel’s 2006 New York Times Magazine profile — though it’s perhaps more correct to say that, not unlike the Belgian fashion designer Martin Margiela or the American novelist Don DeLillo, he merely possesses monomaniacal commitment to his creative process. “I don’t do anything live,” he told me when we met at the diner. “I’m not even here right now.”THESE DAYS, GREENBERG says, he spends afternoons wandering around Chelsea or merely pacing around his apartment, talking aloud to himself until he happens upon a thought or a line of dialogue that he wants to commit to the page. He’s singularly focused on his writing to the point that even his hobbies follow a neat narrative arc: He’s deeply invested in the lives of his friends’ children and young relatives, including ones he’s never met in real life, delighting in their guilelessness, and in watching, Arrington says, “as these human beings evolve.” He’s an accomplished cook and ardent fan of “The Great British Baking Show,” the format of which, he says, he finds soothing: “A causes B which causes C which causes D.” His actress friends come over often for meals; when they’re not there, Greenberg, who suffers from insomnia, emails them late into the morning. “He sees a lot of tasks as distractions — I have heard him say a day he leaves the house is a day he will not write,” Corman adds.However, Greenberg will soon have to leave the house more than he might have hoped. “Take Me Out” is one of the Broadway season’s most anticipated productions, with its famous cast (featuring the television actors Jesse Tyler Ferguson and Jesse Williams as Mason and Darren, respectively) and its focus on what we now call intersectionality: The most explosive scene involves a character using racial epithets to describe his teammates as fans turn against a mixed-race, queer, once-beloved player, described on the first page as “the one-man-emblem-of-racial-harmony stuff.” Though you could never call Greenberg’s work diversity-minded, his most moving plays have always focused on the wounds of the past inflicted upon the realities of the present — whether it’s the aging doyennes in their 14-room Central Park West apartment in 2014’s “The Assembled Parties” or the generation-jumping cast of 1997’s “Three Days of Rain,” in which each actor plays both parent and child. “Take Me Out,” reconsidered today, is necessarily retrospective.That doesn’t mean that Greenberg isn’t still writing to try to understand the present moment. In the wake of the 2016 election, when he was, he says, “steeped in that kind of weird, gobsmacked feeling of hopelessness,” he decided to use a commission to create a play that he hoped would bring him out of his malaise. The result, “The Perplexed,” which will open at Manhattan Theater Club in March, harks back to his earliest scripts, a cloudy brew of many characters with many back stories, all slowly unraveling on the wedding day of two young people from a pair of rich, white, old-guard New York families. If the conceit sounds a bit retrograde for our current mood, Greenberg was aware of that from the outset; a quote from the American writer Anand Giridharadas provides the play’s epigraph: “Is there space among the woke for the still-waking?”Greenberg’s attempts to answer that question involve a matriarch who’s a local official — inspired by his recent habit of watching public-access political hearings in lieu of MSNBC — and her “puppyish” 20-something son, Micah, who has, of late, been “going bareback for Prepboyz-dot-com.” Whereas Greenberg’s earlier plays tended to be romantic, this script is much more explicit: Micah’s into water sports (people urinating on one another), though he insists that his nascent pornography career, at least until his family learns about it, is a matter of personal privacy. After decades of staying at home, self-isolation has become a moral stance for Greenberg — which isn’t to say he’s not still watching the city beyond his windows and the ways people Micah’s age are thinking and behaving.In fact, one could read “The Perplexed” as an early adopter’s lament for discretion as a form of defense, a shield against cancel culture. “It’s a scary time to be public in any way,” says Greenberg, who’s never participated in social media. “It’s such a combatively social world; you’re just in the line of fire all the time. Yet some people seek it more than ever, because somehow, I guess, it’s become identified with existing.” In a way, he’s arguing for his new play’s relevance, but also for the return of “Take Me Out” — in which Darren is, ultimately, punished for coming out — and, above all, his own way of living. Once again, though, it’s one of his characters, with their layered messages, who gets the last word: “The world (not your fault), is an increasingly horrifying place that constantly reminds us of our creatureliness,” Micah tells a family friend in his 60s when asked about his new career. “And I think for me, the porn is a kind of fetishism, like a shrinking of the overwhelming vastness of existence.” Micah’s sex work, of course, can be seen as a metaphor for Greenberg’s own work — a way to write himself, and his audience, out of the encroaching dread. More

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    Lucy Prebble’s ‘A Very Expensive Poison’ Wins the Blackburn Prize

    Lucy Prebble — the British playwright and writer for TV series including “Succession” — won the Susan Smith Blackburn Prize on Monday for “A Very Expensive Poison,” an acclaimed play about a Russian assassination on British soil.The Blackburn Prize, worth $25,000, is one of the most prominent awards for female playwrights. Previous winners have included Lynn Nottage’s “Sweat” and, last year, Jackie Sibblies Drury’s “Fairview.”Prebble’s play, which premiered at the Old Vic in London last year, is about the 2006 killing in London of Alexander Litvinenko, a former Russian spy, who drank green tea laced with polonium. The play follows Litvinenko as he investigates his own death, and his wife Marina’s quest for justice.Critics praised the play for its inventiveness, as much as its political drive. It included songs, puppets, and even an offstage President Vladimir V. Putin trying to direct the action and divert the audience’s attention from the killing.“If the onstage result sometimes seems messy and scattershot, well, you get the impression that theatrical tidiness has taken a deliberate back seat to outrage,” Matt Wolf wrote in a review for The New York Times.“It’s a wonderful one-off,” Dominic Maxwell wrote in The Times of London, adding that the play was “as tender as it is clever, as incensed as it is inventive.”“I wasn’t expecting to get any international recognition, so it’s really thrilling,” Prebble said in a telephone interview. Britain and America “are in a similar place culturally and artistically,” she added, so the play’s message of a woman’s struggle to overcome Russian interference clearly struck a chord with audiences and the judges.Prebble has been shortlisted for the Blackburn Prize several times before, including for “Enron,” which told the story of the downfall of this American energy company.Some 160 other plays were nominated for the award. The 10-strong shortlist included Celine Song’s “Endlings,” which opens at New York Theater Workshop on March 9, and Anne Washburn’s “Shipwreck,” which is at the Woolly Mammoth Theater in Washington until March 8.The judges also gave a special commendation, worth $10,000, to Aleshea Harris, for “What To Send Up When It Goes Down,” her production about people of color who lost their lives to “racialized violence.”Ben Brantley, The New York Times’s co-chief theater critic, called it a “truly remarkable new work” when it opened in 2018 at A.R.T./New York Theaters. It was as much “a ritual” and “a dance party” as a play filled with anger, he said.In 2014, Phoebe Waller-Bridge also received a special commendation, for “Fleabag.” More

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    ‘Tumacho’ Review: The Strange Delights of a Supernatural Horse Opera

    Some shows play things close to the vest as long as they can, and reveal their intentions progressively. “Tumacho” is not one of them.Ethan Lipton’s delirious play with music starts with a chorus of singing puppet cactuses. Phillipa Soo (late of “Hamilton” and “Amélie”) enters, playing a pigtailed gunslinger, and shoots each cactus dead. Actually, one literally dies of fright.The rest of the evening follows suit, which is fitting for a supernatural Western comedy involving a soul-sucking demon.To paraphrase the wise singer David St. Hubbins in “This Is Spinal Tap,” it’s such a fine line between silly and stupid. Thankfully, this show always falls on the right side of that line.Now back for an encore run at the Connelly Theater, “Tumacho” premiered in 2016 as part of Clubbed Thumb’s Summerworks — a series that also gave us “What the Constitution Means to Me” in 2017 and “Men on Boats” in 2015. The company’s mission is to develop and produce “funny, strange and provocative” new American plays; “Tumacho” is too goofy to be provocative — unless a couple of dopey scatological jokes are enough to unsettle you — but it certainly scores on the other two counts. It’s easy to see why the director Leigh Silverman (“Grand Horizons,” “Violet”) and an array of superlative actors signed up for this wonderful lark.Soo’s Catalina Vucovich-Villalobos lives in a godforsaken “one-horse town where the horse broke down,” as the cactuses put it. The population has taken a nosedive thanks to the nefarious actions of one Bill Yardley (Andrew Garman), who dresses all in black, as villains are wont to do. The blustery, buffoonish Mayor Evans (John Ellison Conlee) is unable to stop Bill, so you can imagine how ill-prepared he is when a prophecy announcing a demon’s return finally comes true.Tumacho once “ran roughshod over these parts,” Doc Alonzo (Gibson Frazier) tells the handsome visitor Clement (Chinaza Uche) — who gets mistakenly shot by the trigger-happy Catalina. Now, that evil spirit is set to take over the body of an unsuspecting citizen and launch a new reign of terror.Tumacho — it would be unbecoming to reveal which character becomes possessed — sucks people almost dry, leaving just enough that they don’t die, and still has room for ungodly amounts of food, served by the cook Chappy (Andy Grotelueschen, a recent Tony Award nominee for “Tootsie” — told you the cast was ace). Bill, of course, joins the force of darkness, becoming Renfield to Tumacho’s Dracula.The show moves at a fast clip, sustained by a parade of gleefully whimsical scenes and inspired non sequiturs. At one point, Catalina declares: “Chappy, I know what I have to do!” To which he replies: “You’re gonna dress up like a badger and move into my cellar?”As if this weren’t enough, Lipton peppers the show with terrific music — those who caught such previous hybrid-genre shows as “The Outer Space” know how good a music-maker he is. Backed by Matthew Dean Marsh on piano, guitar and banjo, the actors occasionally launch into songs that, at their best, like “Home,” have the effortless, beautiful simplicity of ditties passed on from one cowboy campfire to the next. Even a no-good varmint could swoon.TumachoThrough March 21 at the Connelly Theater, Manhattan; 212-260-0153, clubbedthumb.org. Running time: 1 hour 40 minutes. More

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    Review: In ‘The Hot Wing King,’ a New Recipe for a Family

    Place six, highly individual and equally quarrelsome men in a small kitchen, and it’s inevitable that they’re going to make a mess, literal and otherwise. Yet while Katori Hall’s “The Hot Wing King” has its problems, you’re unlikely to feel that having too many cooks on board is among them.On the contrary, this likable but lumpy production directed by Steve H. Broadnax III, which opened on Sunday night at the Pershing Square Signature Center, is never better than when its all-male ensemble is functioning as an awkward but interdependent unit — riffing with, scoring off and rubbing up against one another. They have that palpable, physical ease with one another, both contented and irritable, that comes from being part of a family.Not all of these people are blood kin. But Hall, the author of the Olivier Award-winning “The Mountaintop” and a writer with sincere affection for every character she creates, is asking what constitutes a family in a world of fragmentation, one that keeps pulling people apart. It’s a subject she explored in her “Hurt Village” (2012), set in a housing project facing demolition and a 21st-century response of sorts to Lorraine Hansberry’s epochal “A Raisin in the Sun.”In material terms, the world of “The Hot Wing King” — which takes place in a very comfortably appointed home in Memphis — is far less bleak. (Michael Carnahan’s set feels like a place you could happily move into on the spot.) That the couple who lives here happens to be gay allows Hall to challenge conventional definitions of manhood and fatherhood in black America.She uses the bright, peppy context of a classical sitcom structure to do so, along with that genre’s shortcuts to resolution. When the play begins, Cordell (Toussaint Jeanlouis) is feverishly preparing for a spicy chicken wing competition to be held the next day. He has only recently moved in with Dwayne (Korey Jackson), a hotel manager, and has yet to find work in Memphis.The 42-year-old Cordell left his family in St. Louis for Dwayne (and has yet to tell the folks back home that was the real reason for doing so), and he is feeling rudderless and resentful about being financially dependent on someone else. So he pours his energy into making great wings, focusing obsessively on a new recipe he describes as “spicy Cajun Alfredo, with bourbon-infused bacon,” the scent of which wafts into the audience.His central helpers, in addition to the ever-patient and sorely tried Dwayne, are their best buddies: the zinger-slinging, designer-label-crazy Isom (Sheldon Best) and the football fanatic Big Charles (Nicco Annan). They are all expected to work late into the night dismembering chickens, stirring pots, adding spices and soaking wood chips, activities that consume a lot of antic stage time.There are, of course, distractions, including the arrival of EJ (an appealingly natural Cecil Blutcher), Dwayne’s 16-year-old nephew, and EJ’s father, TJ (Eric B. Robinson Jr.), a grifter and occasional holdup artist. EJ’s mother died on a drug binge while being restrained by police, an event for which Dwayne, her brother, blames himself. Dwayne would now like for EJ to live with him, which sparks resentment from both Cordell and TJ.The balance between social soap opera and buoyant comedy isn’t always gracefully sustained. Nor is the script able to comfortably fold its more somber subplots into the running, frantic story of the cooking contest.When characters, especially Cordell, talk about their deeper feelings, they tend to shift into improbably poetic flights of diction. (“I see why you steady treat me like a child. I am. It’s like I’ve just been pushed out of the womb and I’m getting hit with the cold and the air and the lights and the truth.”)What’s refreshing here is the matter-of-fact depiction of black gay characters who may be dissatisfied, to varying degrees, with their own behavior but not, ultimately, because of their sexuality. Watching Cordell and Dwayne casually snuggle and kiss, draping their bodies over each other, you sense a bond in which erotic attraction has segued into something both more relaxed and more complex. You don’t doubt that these men were meant to be together.Not that the script stints on the rapid-fire exchange of put-downs that has long been a staple of gay comedy. “I can smell shade a mile away,” Isom says contentedly. “I’m a walking umbrella.” And, yes, the same character may worry that he’s the kind of guy whom other men want only for a single night.But by and large, these men are disarmingly comfortable with their sexual identities. This means that when TJ complains that Dwayne and Cordell are dubious role models to a growing boy, no one’s really buying it, including TJ himself. And when the play’s four gay characters launch into a spontaneous performance of Luther Vandross’s “Never Too Much,” it’s hard to imagine anyone not subscribing to what one character calls “the gospel according to Luther” or to the aura of good fellowship that floods the stage.The Hot Wing KingTickets Through March 22 at the Pershing Square Signature Center, Manhattan; 212-244-7529, signaturetheatre.org. Running time: 2 hours 20 minutes. More