Thursday, August 25, 2011

The Select

The Elevator Repair Service is presenting their latest work, The Select [the Sun Also Rises] at the New York Theater Workshop.  They are the inventive company that did "Gatz" last year at the Public.   The Sun also Rises is Ernest Hemingway's first novel and considered by many to be his best.  Written in 1926, one year after 'The Great Gatsby'.  According to the New York Times Hemingway's book has never been out of print and is believed to be the most translated of all novels.  The story is about a group of expatriate Americans and British living in Paris.  They travel to Pamplona for the festival of Fermin, the bullfighting and the running of the bulls.  The book was first called Fiesta, then The Lost Generation [a label used by Gertrude Stein about expats after the war who were living in Paris] and then The Sun Also Rises from the Biblical quote "What profit hath a man for all his labor under the sun?  One generation passeth away and another generation cometh: but the earth abidith.  The sun also ariseth and the sun goeth down and hasteth to his place where he arose."
The plot: Jake loves Lady Brett and she loves him, but Jake was wounded in the war and can't perform.  Lady Brett has affairs with Mike, then Cohn, then Mike again and then the bullfighter Romero.  Everybody drinks too much.  They fight.  Romero is badly injured in the fight but has a successful day in the ring and he and Lady Brett go off together.  Eventually she contacts Jake who rescues her from a seedy Hotel.  They talk about their love for each other and what might have been.  Then Lady Brett marries Mike.  During the story they drink a lot, dance some, then drink some more.  Some of them go on a fishing trip and drink.  I mean like 3 or 4 martinis and 3 or 4 bottles of wine each with lunch.
It did not work as a drama.  3 and a half hours of waiting for something to happen or some beautiful language, nada.  Cohn is Jewish and characters use anti-Semitic epithets about him and to him.  There are some gay men at the cafe in Paris and "faggot" is used.  Hemingway's characters aren't just crude they're not interesting.  They have nothing to say.  OK, maybe that's the point, but it would have gone over a lot easier if I could have joined in the drinking.  

Sunday, August 21, 2011

House of Worship


The Friend's Meeting house is across from Stuyvesant Park at 16th Street.  They are commonly called Quakers because they 'tremble at the word of God'.   The term was first used as a put-down by their enemies but today the Friends use it themselves.  They began to appear in England in the 1640's, at the height of the Reformation.
They believe in "continuing revelation".  Truth is continually revealed to us from God, so there is no need for Priests.  They reject religious symbolism and the sacraments. The Society of Friends has evolved over the centuries.  The evangelical sect, the largest, believe in the literal interpretation of the bible as God's word.  The liberal sect believe in an evolving relationship between us and God.  Some liberal sects are universalist and even non-theistic.  Traditionally the Quakers have always and still believe in the full equality of women, pacifism, anti-slavery, social action and refusal to swear an oath.  Their children are taught their SPICES along with their ABC's.
S...simplicity
P...Peace
I...Integrity
C...Community
E...Equality
S...Stewardship
"My religion is very simple.  My religion is kindness."
The Dalai Lama.

Tryst

The Irish Repertory Company is doing a first play by Karoline Leach with Andrea Maulella and Mark Shanahan.  It takes place in 1910 London and is the story of a charming con man who marries women for their money.  Then runs.  It is expertly performed for a play that changes gears a couple of times.  The main tension is in the character of George.  Is he in love or is he playing the woman for her money?  The fact that the tension can hold up for 2 hours is a mark of the expertise of the performers, and the writing.  My problem is with the ending.
SPOILER ALERT:   The fact that he kills her, turns the drama upside down. Not for love or money, I guess.

I've been setting up my fall theater season.  Membership in the Irish Rep, the Classic Stage Company, the Public Theater, and 4th St. Warehouse, and of course the opera.  Tickets to King Lear, The Elevator Repair Service production of The Select and Master Class with Tyne Daly, and more.  What, you live in New York City and yor're bored!