John Randolph, Olympia Dukakis, R.A. Dow. |
The following precedes each entry
"In Lieu of Reviews"
To compensate, I used the research I’d done on the 1970s to write a
book for Greenwood called Ten Seasons: New York Theatre in the
Seventies, which described all aspects of that era’s theatre, onstage and
off. Many years later, in 2012, I began a postretirement “career” as a theatre
reviewer, which led to my creating this blog as an outlet for my reviews. Over
the past eight years or so I’ve posted nearly 1,600 reviews, a substantial
number having first appeared on other websites: Theater Pizzazz, The Broadway
Blog, and Theater Life.
Now, however, with the New York theatre in suspension, and my
reviewing completely halted, is probably the perfect time to post as many as
possible of the entries I prepared for the never-published 1970-1975 book. The
entries that follow are in alphabetical order. Each entry has a heading listing
the subject categories of the work described: the author (A), the director (D),
additional staging (ADD ST), when credited; the producer (P), the set designer
(S), the costume designer (C), the lighting designer (L), the source (SC), the
theatre (T), the dates of the run, and, in parentheses, the length of the run.
The original entries also contained the names of all the actors but I’ve
omitted those here.
In addition to the shows chronicled here, the New York professional
theatre produced hundreds of others, largely in the form of showcases receiving
brief runs of a dozen or less performances, most of them unreviewed. Their
credits and other significant data can be found in sources such as the annual
series called Theatre World and The Theater Yearbook: The Best Plays of . .
.
0I will try to post at least one entry daily. When time allows, I’ll
provide more. The manuscript exists on fading, fragile paper and, because no digital
files exist, must be retyped. Hopefully, the tragic health situation we’re all
enduring will abate before I get too far into posting these entries but, for
the time being, devoted theatre lovers may find reading these materials
informative.
Lou Gilbert, Peggy Whitton. |
BABA GOYA [Comedy/Crime/Family/Marriage/Old
Age] A: Steve Tesich; D: Edwin Sherin; S: Karl Eigsti; C: Whitney Blausen; L:
Roger Morgan; P: American Place Theatre (OB); 5/9/73-6/2/73 (22)
[NOURISH THE BEAST P: Edgar Lansbury and Joseph Beruh in the American Place
Theatre Production; T: Cherry Lane Theatre (OB); 10/3/73-11/18/73 (54)]
Baba Goya, Steve Tesich’s
farce about a screwball Queens family was well enough received during its subscriptions
season run at the not-for-profit American Place Theatre to permit a stab at a
commercial transfer to Greenwich Village’s Cherry Lane Theatre. The move made
one casting change and also gave the play a new title, Nourish the Beast, but the play lasted only a month and a half.
Olympia Dukakis, Randy Kim, James Greene. |
Presiding
over the family is the earthy matriarch Baba Goya (Olympia Dukakis), married to
her fourth husband, John Randolph), a man who thinks he is dying and
consequently places a newspaper ad for a successor. Also in the zany household
(reminiscent of You Can’t Take it With
You) is an adopted son, a policeman named Bruno (R.A. Dow), who brings home
one of his arrests, a young Asian (Randy Kim), instead of taking him to the
station. The criminal is kept handcuffed to the radiator for much of the play.
There’s also a divorced daughter (Petty Whitton) who has a persecution complex
as a result of having voted for Richard Nixon; an old man adopted to play the
role of grandpa (Lou Gilbert), but who keeps rejecting the term “grandpa,” and
so on.
The
play was decidedly funny, although its plot was often confusing and probably
not meant to be taken as anything more than an “extravagant and deliberately
inconsequential” farce, wrote Harold Clurman. The odd characters bore little
resemblance to real people, despite the laughs they provoked. Several critics
were in favor of greater verisimilitude in their depiction.
The
result was a vagueness of purpose that led some to agree with assessments like
John Simon’s: “Whereas I think I know what a play by Beckett is about, I have scarcely
any inkling of what Baba Goya is
driving at.” Otis Guernsey added that “The playwright has a knack of welding
bits of the absurd into fairly naturalistic situations, a trick which is
entertaining but maybe not yet quite as intriguing as it will be when he
perfects it.”
The
production worked well for most but a few were disconcerted by the directorial
realism, which seemed at odds with the fanciful style of the script. Still,
Tesich was given a Drama Desk Award as the season’s most promising playwright.
Previous entries:
Abelard and
Heloise
Absurd Person
Singular
AC/DC
“Acrobats”
and “Line”
The Advertisement/
All My Sons
All Over
All Over Town
All the Girls Came
Out to Play
Alpha Beta
L’Amante Anglais
Ambassador
American Gothics
Amphitryon
And Miss Reardon
Drinks a Little
And They Put
Handcuffs on the Flowers
And Whose Little
Boy Are You?
Anna K.
Anne of Green
Gables
Antigone
Antiques
Any Resemblance to Persons Living or Dead
Applause
Ari
As You Like It
Augusta
The
Au Pair Man