Posts Tagged ‘david hyde pierce’

Culture Vulture: Adam Bock’s A LIFE at Playwrights Horizons

December 4, 2016

I saw Adam Bock’s tremendous new play A Life at Playwrights Horizons for the second time yesterday. It impressed me again with its deep humor and humanity and with the playwright’s amazing skill at creating characters, writing amazing scenes, and taking unbelievable freedom for himself in shaping the narrative. The first half hour of the play is an extraordinary long monologue by the main character, played by David Hyde Pierce. When I first saw the play in previews, the audience in the intimate Peter Sharp space upstairs at Playwrights was pretty quiet. This time, after stellar reviews, the audience was quite excited, plus clearly many were there who were major David Hyde Pierce fans (including Andy’s friends from London whom we took to see it). And the way he responded to every tiny little ripple in the audience — including instantly saying “Bless you” when somebody sneezed — was fantastic to witness. Tonight is the final performance.

david-hyde-pierce-in-a-life-joan-marcus
One of the things I always love about seeing shows at Playwrights Horizons is that almost always you can pick up in the lobby afterwards a simple Xeroxed copy of an interview with the playwright conducted by either artistic director Tim Sanford or the literary manager Adam Greenfield. These smart, in-depth interviews almost always tell you everything you want to know about the show you’ve just seen. The interview with Bock doesn’t answer ALL my questions but it’s a fascinating conversation nevertheless. You can read it online here. Check it out and let me know what you think. There’s also a ton of other intriguing stuff about the playwright and the play on the theater company’s website — see here. adam-bock

 

 

 

Performance diary: SONDHEIM: THE BIRTHDAY CONCERT

March 16, 2010

March 15 – In 1985, Stephen Holden and I sat in the tenth row center to see Follies In Concert” at Avery Fisher Hall, which turned out to be one of the most memorable nights of musical theater I’ve ever experienced. If you’ve heard the excellent recording, you can imagine what I mean. Happily, Stephen invited me to be his guest for “Sondheim: The Birthday Concert,” the spring gala for the New York Philharmonic – same venue and some of the same cast. The occasion was Stephen Sondheim’s 80th birthday, and the show was a tasteful and surprisingly low-key affair, directed by Lonny Price – pleasurable, never boring but never actually thrilling either. For one thing, hardly any surprises. The one Sondheim rarity showed up early in the program, when Victoria Clark came out to sing “Don’t Laugh,” a number that Sondheim wrote for Judy Holliday as a favor to Mary Rodgers when the short-lived 1963 musical (Holliday’s last) Hot Spot was in trouble out of town.

The biggest musical discovery for me was Nathan Gunn, whom operagoers have been drooling over for a few years (both for his gorgeous baritone and his gorgeous bod, stripped to the waist in Billy Budd — see above). He sang “Joanna” from Sweeney Todd and “Too Many Mornings” from Follies with Audra McDonald, which was the highlight of the evening for me – what  a great song! Laura Benanti sang a lovely version of “So Many People” from Saturday Night. It was great to see some original cast recreations: Chip Zien and Joanna Gleason from Into the Woods, Mandy Patinkin and Bernadette Peters from Sunday in the Park with George. And the show culminated in a Diva Showdown where Bernadette, Audra, Patti LuPone, Donna Murphy, Marin Mazzie, and Elaine Stritch (all in beautiful red Diane von Furstenberg gowns) sang songs they’re not associated with. Stritch was forgivably shaky, and the others were fine, but there were no revelations. David Hyde Pierce made for a droll host, nattering on about wanting to hear Sondheim songs in other languages and perpetually chiding conductor Paul Gemignani (who did a spectacular job, by the way) to stay away from Sweeney Todd (“We’re eating cake tonight, not people!”). The choruses from a bunch of Broadway shows filled the stage and the aisles and the balconies to end the show with a blast of “Sunday.” And Sondheim himself took a curtain call, sweet and humble, as you might expect, and moved to tears, which I don’t think any of us would have expected.

We had fun chatting at intermission with Tony Kushner and Mark Harris (Tony said he’s freakishly adept at memorizing lyrics and had astonished Sondheim at dinner once by reeling some off) and afterwards with Tony Tommasini and his friend Scott Wheeler.