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TheaterMay 2006 Greatest hits & misses by Mark Steyn On Hedda Gabler, Hell, Jacques Brel is Alive and Well and Living in Paris, and Ring of Fire. Almost any week of the year, you can experience the familiar sensation of a great performance in a lousy play. Debra Monks marvelous turn in Paul Weitzs Show People, at Second Stage, is a more or less typical example. Miss Monk and Lawrence Pressman are cast as has-been old troupers who turn up at a Hamptons beach house in order to play the parents of a young tycoon eager to impress the girl he wants to marry. Its not as simple as that, of course, but all the complications can be seen coming from a mile off. This is the kind of labored comedy-thriller that would have eked out a few weeks in the West End and Broadway of sixty years ago, when the defiantly sterile Hamptons beach houseall cold steel and glass panoramaswould have been a Gothic mansion, all wood paneling and French windows. Now its upgraded to the status of non-profit pseudo-art. And, given that, these days, commercial theatre ... This article is available to subscribers and for individual purchaseSubscribe to TNC (Print and Online editions) Subscribe to TNC (Online only) This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 24 May 2006, on page 36 Copyright © 2008 The New Criterion | www.newcriterion.com http://www.newcriterion.com/articles.cfm/greatest-hits-misses-2401
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Already a print subscriber? click for online access by Brooke Allen On Gypsy at the St James Theatre, Boeing-Boeing at the Longacre Theater, and The New Century at Lincoln Center. by Brooke Allen On In the Heights at the Richard Rodgers Theatre, Almost an Evening at the Theatres at 45 Bleecker Street, Parlour Song at the Atlantic Theater, and The Four of Us at Manhattan Theatre Club. by Brooke Allen On Conversations in Tusculum at the Public Theater, The Cherry Orchard Sequel at LaMaMa ETC., Gray Area at the Barrow Group, and Next to Normal at the Second Stage Theater. by Mark Steyn On World War IV: The Long Struggle Against Islamofascism by Norman Podhoretz. New from The New Criterion: ‘Free speech in
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