ARTS INTERNATIONAL
Editor/Publisher, Bina Sharif
ARTS INTERNATIONAL covers THEATER, FILM, VISUAL ARTS, CUISINE, AND LITERATURE

Thursday, February 20, 2020

DRACULA AND FRANKENSTEIN AT CSC

 DRACULA and FRANKENSTEIN at CSC
Dracula

New adaptations of two great novels of Gothic literature, Dracula by Bram Stoker and Frankenstein by Mary Shelly.
Dracula is being adapted by Kate Hamill and it is not such a scary tale as the original but a melodramatic, comic, witty take of feminist revenge on patriarchy.

Count Dracula (wonderful Mathew Amendt) swagger around in Transylvania in a lavish long white coat sucking people's blood turning them into vampires and his slaves for ever.  He has two beautiful women slaves ready to attack any new victim and here arrives Jonathan Harker (Michael Crane)
a lawyer to make arrangements for his client count Dracula to move away from Transylvania to England to find new victims.
He is quite hapless and is soon seduced by the count.  He has a pregnant wife back home, Mina (powerful Kelly Curran) who is a good friend of Lucy (Jamie Ann Romero) who sadly becomes the new victim of Dracula and Mina is totally at loss of Lucy's new illness.

Kate Hamill herself takes the role of Renfield, a deranged woman who is in a mental institution
and recites poetry, keep announcing the arrival of Dady.  Kate Hamill is excellent and very funny
in her bandaged outfit and battered eye make up.  We eventually find out who the, "Dady" is.
SomehowI found her wait for her Dady hilariously funny and cracked up every time she mentioned it.
Doctor Seward (Mathew Saldivar) who is engaged to Lucy and is in-charge of the institute is at a loss
about Lucy's illness and that's when a Vampire expert cowboy doctor Van Helsing (Jessica Frances Dukes, an amazingly powerful performer) takes over and convinces Mina to take control of her own destiny.  Mina and Dr. Van Helsing will eventually will become a two women team and deal with patriarchal power men have over women for centuries.  She wants Mina to be bold, assertive and convinces her to stand up for herself.

The last part of the play becomes a battle of sexes like fight mimicking an action movie scenario
and we do know who is going to be the winner here.

It's a wonderful production with many familiar laugh lines which takes away from the fear of the horror we came to see. Not very scary at all but totally funny, light and enjoyable.

The costumes by Robert Perdziola are refreshing and beautiful.  The lighting design by Adam Honore
is very effective and the sound by Leon Rothenberg is haunting and creates an atmosphere which can make you shiver in your seat.

I enjoyed the script by Kate Hamill and the direction by Sarna Lapin.  The direction is clean and fluid
on a bare stage.


  FRANKENSTEIN

Tristan Bernays adaption of one of the most famous novel by Mary Shelly is also sharing the bill with Dracula.  Frankenstein, directed by Timothy Douglas and is performed by Rob Morrison who is on his guitar and assume some other roles later on.  Stephanie Berry, a very powerful actress who is blessed with an amazing stage presence plays the doctor Victor Frankenstein who creates the monster and the monster as well.  This double role some times becomes confusing but still doesn't take away from the mesmerizing ability of the actress.


The beginning of the play is like a silent performance piece except some vague sounds of the guitar
when the monster is born and is trying to breath life into herself,  Stephanie Berry tries to move her limbs, tries to take some steps, smells some herbs, eat some berries, picks up a book, tries to learn some words and then eventually with the help of an audience member slowly pronounce the word, "Frankenstein" From then on there is a quick transformation of the character into a poet and a scholar.
That transition is un-nerving.  The creature asks fundamental question from her invisible creator about why was she created in such an image? Eventually the monster becomes violent and goes on a killing spree after she leaves the laboratory.  The play is very serious and has a metaphorical element to it. When people who look different, even scary to the ones who call themselves normal and are totally afraid of the otherness of, "Others" are also born by the same creator, one and only creator for all. But the so called normal beings forget that part completely and that question which is very complex is subtly being raised here.
The question is complex and not very easily answerable. it's like saying, "God created me and god created you and we are both so very different and whose fault is it?  And what should be done about it?"
The play might not be as enjoyable like a comedy but we are not watching a comedy.  We are witnessing something human and horrible at the same time.  Very timely. society is like that and had been for some time.

REVIEWED
By
BINA SHARIF
artsinternational.blogspot.com
binashariff@gmail.com
Cell:212-260-6207
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Monday, February 17, 2020

TU AMARAS AT BARYSHNIKOV ARTS CENTER

"TU AMARAS" at BARYSHNIKOV ARTS CENTER

REVIEW By Bina Sharif

Bonobo, a Theater Ensemble and Baryshnikov Center present "Tu Amaras"

Written by: Pablo Manzi
Set, light, and costume design by: Felipe Olivares and Juan Andres Rivera
Music by: Camilo Catepillan
Produced by: Horacio Perez
Directed by: Andreina and Pablo Manzi

CAST: Gabriel Canas, Carlos Donoso, Paulina Giglio, Guilherme Sepulveda, and Gabriel Urzua

Bonobo is a Chilean theater company founded by Pablo Manzi and Andreina Olivari.
Their goal is to create plays which deal with the discrimination of ,"Otherness"
They create their work collectively and their approach is experimental with emphasis on improvisation. Their subject matter is often very serious but has incredible humor in it and all of that is in their new work TU AMARAS.

A group of medical doctors are getting ready for an international conference trying to explore how to deal with others who are different and at times assume the role of the enemy in modern societies even in today's democratically oriented societies thus creating great animosity and hatred towards others who look different, behave differently and perhaps speak a different language.

These doctors unexpectedly also have to deal with aliens who have landed on earth to avoid genocide
and it disturbs their method of working, their research and their way of presenting their material
at the conference.  They start to explore their own racism and prejudice towards others who might
occupy lower income status or utter an un-pleasant word and thus the excuse for violence, even murder. Doctors tease one of their fellow participant that he looks like a rabbit and the word is repeated so often that it becomes a source of their hilarious amusement. The guy who is being called a rabbit is so enraged that when he hears this sentence again, "You look like a rabbit" by a taxi driver that he ends up murdering him. All these scenarios are created with great humor.
The play is unusual but deals with the most important topic, racism, otherness and prejudice which
is sadly prevalent even now in 21st century. Excellent presentation loaded with hilarity.
Keep an eye out for bonobo.

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Saturday, February 15, 2020

SISTER CALLING MY NAME AT SHEEN CENTER

SISTER CALLING MY NAME 
at SHEEN CENTER
Review by BINA SHARIF

SISTER CALLING MY NAME

Written by Buzz McLaughlin
Directed by:Peter Dobbins
Set Design: Daniel Prosky
Lighting Design: Michael Abrams

SISTER CALLING MY NAME is a memory play and the memories are hauntingly sad.
Brother Michael (John Marshall) recalls the most painful episodes of her sister's mental illness.
Sister Lindsey (very effective Gillian Todd) is now being taken care of by sister Anne Frances
(Susie Duecker) who once was Michael's girl friend.  Michael was madly in love with her but she
was very deeply into god and always believed in hope and the power of redemption.

Michael's only sibling, his sister Lindsey was mentally ill and was hospitalized.
Lindsey was consumed with love for her brother and was always thinking of him and calling for him.

When the play opens Lindsey is being taken care of by sister Anne Frances who is extremely tender and kind to her. She is helping her to paint pictures because Lindsey has that hidden and incredible
talent of an amazing artist and sister Anne knows how to tap into that with the power of prayer, hope
and belief in her faith. There is a lot of emphasis on the positive purpose of creation of human beings
by god.  Everyone has a gift, talent and a hidden purpose and reason to be here, no matter the stress,
the misfortune and the illness.  Life is breath and breath is life and as long as we have breath we have
to be positive under all circumstances and believe in our creation and hope for the best.

Play is being told in flashbacks and Michael at this point has lost his parents, his girl friend and all hope as well.  He is disillusioned and has to face lots of loss and the severe mental illness of his sister whom he loves deeply but wants to not face it.

Lindsey is being very productive at this point with the help of sister Anne Frances and she paints
beautiful pictures constantly and is being sort out for exhibitions.  She is very pleasant and is always
saying that she is painting these beautiful pictures for Michael.  It's very touching, her love for her brother. Sister Anne finally reaches Michael and wants him to get involved in promoting her art and
face the facts that she after all is his sister and the love and the blood bonds of real family can never vanish and must be dealt with.  Eventually the play becomes a force of redemption and hope under all
difficulties of suffering, pain and sorrow,

The play is very poetic and sad.  The actors are all very capable but I was very fond of Gillian Todd as Lindsey. She was totally believable in her smiling demeanor and the flashes of her violent illness.
Susie Duecker as sister Anne was very pious and humble and tolerant and because of her faith, her patience and her power of prayer, the possibility of redemption was possible.  John Marshall as Michael had a very painful journey and he travelled well.

The play is not very easy to watch and is disturbing and that's how all art should be.  We should be
challenged and provoked through the healing effects of art which comes eventually.
I am glad that I got to see, SISTER CALLING MY NAME.
The play is a co-production of Blackfriars Repertory Theater and Sheen Center.

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Sunday, February 9, 2020

MEDEA AT BAM

MEDEA AT BAM

MEDEA: Written by Simon Stone after Euripides
                 Directed by Simon Stone
                 Set by Bob Cousins
                 Lighting design by Sarah Johnston
                 Video by Julia Frey
                  Produced by BAM, International theater Amsterdam and David Lan

The play opens on a very bright white set which has white walls, white spotless floors and not a hint of any furniture.  The two children, Gus (Orson Hong) and Edgar (Jolly Swag) are on stage playing
with their phone and iPod.

 In this modern version of Medea, Anna (Rose Byrne) a skilled scientist has just returned from mental
Institution after spending almost a year there because she had been poisoning her husband Lucas (Bobby Cannavale) who had been cheating on her by having an affair with Clara (Madeline Weinstein) the daughter of his boss Christopher (Dylan Baker) to advance his career.
Anna has already helped her husband Lucas who worked in the same lab and is a scientist as well but not as advanced as his wife and she feels totally disrespected by his dismissiveness.
They are now divorced and Lucas has the custody of his two sons Gus and  Edgar

After Anna is back from the hospital and behaves pretty much in control of her plight decides to spend the night with her children and her husband.  The children are making a documentary about their home life and we see mostly Anna's close ups on a big screen above the stage. They end up making love and Clara finds out and is very upset and her father wants Lucas to right the wrong by making Clara pregnant.

Husband and wife bicker and fight and yell and scream at each other like many married couples whose marriage is gone sour.  Anna finds out that Clara is pregnant  and wants to take revenge.

In the meantime black ash keeps falling like black snow flakes from the ceiling and covers the
immaculately white floor, (Poetic image of coming doom)

Both children play as normal children would with anything even ash and throw handful at each other
running around and enjoying that moment of fun which won't last very long for sure.  Both actors
Jolly Swag and Orson Hong are wonderful.  Actually they are the most watchable in their innocence
and playfulness even under the difficult atmosphere they are in.

Rose Byrne and Bobby Cannavale are like any other husband and wife whose marriage is falling apart for what ever reason and thus doesn't evoke the terror which has been experienced in Euripides
Medea. The last act by Anna of burning the house with her children in it is based on a real event which took place in Kansas city in 1995 in which a woman named Deborah Green who put fire to her house and killed her children.

Though its always a good idea to go back to the classics and re- evaluate them but then the power
of the original has to match the power of the modern versions.  Though this Medea is a very good script and well acted by the actors and well designed, it just doesn't evoked the horror of the suffering
of the ancient mother.  It's not the fault of the writer/director.  we are in different times, there are so many horrors of so many different kinds that perhaps we have become numb to the grief of others.
There is another factor of our being a little distanced from Anna's tragedy because from the very beginning it's established that she is mentally disturbed and it's assumed by many that a mentally disturbed  person is capable of lot of harm and perhaps must not be left alone with kids and should be better supervised.  But still no excuses are enough.  The death of innocent babes by the hand of their own mother is a vast tragedy and we should be more vulnerable to the plight of women who suffers
from it or any one else who has the misfortune to go through it.

This Medea raised more issues of mental illness for me than the abandonment and betrayal of
Euripides Medea who left Colchis, helped Jason retrieve the golden fleece, became a refugee in Greece, after bearing two sons was being exiled by Creon, the king of Corinth because Jason wanted to marry Creon's daughter to improve his station in life.  Medea was crushed, hurt, humiliated, abandoned and wanted to take revenge against Jason without ever contemplating the eternal loss of her own children.  In murdering her children does lies madness as well, so in the deep analysis of
both plays, both women are for sure mentally disturbed.  In this regard it was very good of Simon Stone to dig down the real cause of this unbelievably scary tragedy and come up with a brand new
Medea after Euripides.

Reviewed by BINA SHARIF
artsinternational.blogspot.com
binashariff@gmail.com
Cell: 212-260-6207
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Thursday, February 6, 2020

ORIGIN 1st IRISH THEATRE FESTIVAL HIGHLIGHTS

                                   ORIGIN 1st IRISH THEATRE FESTIVAL HIGHLIGHTS
   
                       London Assurance                                                           Scourge

                                       
                                                               Round Room

ORIGIN 1st Irish Theatre festival just ended after it's glorious one month run in various venues
in Manhattan, queens and long Island. This is not only a fascinating theatre festival but a very important one as well.  We are fortunate to see wonderful original productions of new and raw
materials by aspiring writers, directors, designers and actors from all over Ireland and from the world.
How fortunate for us to be dealt with such a treat.

I wasn't able to catch everything the festival offered but the plays I saw were deeply engrossing
and left an impression with me that the most important thing in life beside having good health is the
arts in all its form and especially theater.  Some time you don't know what to expect and then you live with the beauty, the revelation about something scary, something mesmerizing and even painful and you leave the space with a different mind set which enhances your own sensibility, your own inner
beauty and sorrow.  And the shows I saw dealt with all that.

I saw the ROUND ROOM by HONOR MOLLOY, not only a superb playwright but a wonderful
poet as well.  Her play takes place in the wards and corridors of a maternity hospital ROTUNDA HOSPITAL in DUBLIN and its about the childbirth of various women mostly poor and desperate over the Centuries. Molloy was very fortunate to have extremely talented actresses who in a limited studio space and the production which is in development process made us forget that this is work in progress and is as good as any finished product in any theater big or small.  The space was perfectly used and there were movements as fluid as a dance.

The highlight of ROUND ROOM was also SUSAN McKEOWN,  grammy award winner Irish singer
and songwriter who had the voice of a nightingale who provoke sensations of stirring ancient times gone by and its pain, sorrows and regret in a dirge like sensation which gave me the chills.  I am still hearing her.  I am so thrilled to know that Molloy won the award for the best playwright.
I would like to see this production again a few more times.

Another highly recommended, profoundly moving and touching the depth of your soul play was
SCOURGE written and acted by MICHELLE DOOLEY-MAHON produced by Wexford arts
and Irish Rep.  The play is about the relationship of mothers and daughters at the times when both need each other.  In SCOURGE, which is about Michelle's own life story about her mother
being in the nursing home with dementia for seven years where the daughter diligently and with great tenderness takes care of her.  The mother never moves ore talk and the daughter feed her, changes her clothes, and put her to bed.  She has all the patience to do this great deal with affection for seven years.
Michelle Dooley Mahon is one of the most brave actress and writer who opens her soul and heart for us and we feel everything she is going through all along. It created lots of pain in my own heart because my own mother passed in an other country oceans apart...without me.
The play is amazingly directed by BEN BARNES, a highly imaginative director from ABBEY TEATER.  I love his concept of using a doll as the mother figure and the tenderness which the actress showed to deal with it was extremely powerful and touching. I am still thinking about the writing and acting of Michelle.  This is what good theater does for you.  Make you feel, think, laugh and cry.
MICHELLE DOOLEY MAHON won the special Jury prize and I am very happy about it because she really deserved it.

I also saw LONDON ASSURANCE at the IRISH REP directed by incredibly talented CHARLOTTE MOORE.  It's a comedy of manners, a farce very well designed with wonderful period costumes and well acted by the whole cast.  The play was written by DION BOUCICAULT, most prominent playwright of 19th century.  He was also an actor and a director.  London Assurance was produced
at Covent Garden in 1841.
The play is about the upper classes with all their spoiled dissatisfaction with life and the wonderful
things they have.  It deal with identity confusion, romance, mystery, intrigue, love triangles and perfect resolutions which work for every one at the end.  It was throughly enjoyable.

The whole ensemble was good but I particularly liked Rachel Pickup as Lady Gay Spanker and  Colin McPhillamy as Sir Harcourt Courtly.  Rachel Pickup got the best actress award, a great choice.
Charlotte Moore won the best director and the play got the best design as well.

I just can't go away without mentioning the most heart wrenching film called NUALA about
Nuala O'Faolain, a great writer who became very well known all over with her memoir, ARE YOU SOMEBODY?. The film is beautifully shot and is immaculately narrated by Marion Finucane,
a radio show host and a childhood friend of Nuala. Once you see this film you will never be able to forget it. A MUST SEE.
 WRITTEN
 by
BINA SHARIF
artsinternational.blogspot.com
binashariff@gmail.com
Cell: 212-260-6207
Facebook.com