Maureen Stapleton, Charles Siebert. |
Homosexuality/Show Business] A: Neil Simon; D: Robert Moore; S: David Hays; C: Frank Thompson; L: Martin Aronstein; P: Saint-Subber; T: Plymouth Theatre; 12/13/70-5/29/71 (193) Note: the description below is followed by a special addition provided by Ron Fassler. I hope you enjoy it.
Betsy von Furstenberg, Ayn Ruymen, Maureen Stapleton, Michael Lombard. |
Returning to her New York apartment, she is forced to deal with the problems foisted on her by her well-meaning but self-involved friends: a beauty worried about her fading looks (Betsy Von Furstenberg) and a gay actor who can’t get any parts (Michael Lombard). She must also struggle to strengthen her relationship with her previously estranged 17-year-old daughter (Ayn Ruyman). It is the latter’s love that finally pulls her through, after she has been once more driven to booze and other self-destructive behavior.
Michael Lombard, Maureen Stapleton. |
The major problems involved the overly contrived plot, stock characters, frequently banal jokes, and confusion between comic and serious styles. Clive Barnes admitted difficulty at making up his mind, and expressed the wish for another day to decide. His carefully worded review delighted in Simon’s skillful use of humor and pathos. John J. O’Connor had no difficulty pronouncing the work a “dud,” nor did Martin Gottfried flinch from calling it “embarrassingly trite.” With this play, the critics began to wage war on Simon for betraying his natural comic gifts and trying too hard to be “serious.”
Ayn Ruymen, Maureen Stapleton. |
That didn’t stop Stapleton from snaring a Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Performance, or a Tony for Best Actress, Play.
In 1971, Ron Fassler, now a writer, actor, and director, was a theatre-crazy adolescent traveling to Broadway from Great Neck as often as possible to see everything he could, usually from up in the cheap seats, Amazingly, he wrote and preserved personal reviews of the 200 or so shows he visited, publishing some of them in his delightful 2017 book, Up in the Cheap Seats: A Historical Memoir of Broadway (Griffith Moon). Ron has agreed to provide this series with occasional PDFs of his reviews, just as he wrote them, with spelling and grammatical errors intact. Ron, of course, now is a professional reviewer, albeit on Covid-19 hiatus, so it's a pleasure to be able to provide samples of his often quite perceptive boyhood musings, "warts and all," as he himself says below of The Gingerbread Lady.