HOME PAGE SEARCH REVIEWS FEATURES NEWS Etcetera and Short Term Listings LISTINGS Broadway Off-Broadway BOOKS and CDs OTHER PLACES Berkshires London LA/San Diego Philadelphia Elsewhere QUOTES On TKTS LETTERS TO EDITOR FILM LINKS MISCELLANEOUS Free Updates Masthead Writing for us |
A CurtainUp Review
Ashley Montana Goes Ashore In the Caicos. . .Or What Am I Doing Here?
By Elyse Sommer
For those of you not up on your fashion models or fashionable resorts, there really is a model named Ashley Montana, and the Caicos Islands are a popular destination for devotees of romantic beaches and and snorkeling. What's more the Flea cover blowup is of the actual February 1991 issue of Sports Illustrated featuring Walter Iooss, Jr's photo of Ashley and a cover line reading "Ashley Montano goes Ashore in the Caicos." Not that any of this really matters, as this is just the author's way of giving that amused and anxious mind a colorful send-off. Rosenblatt clearly has a Tom Stoppard-ish love for word play and knows how to let often ridiculous word bombs rub up against one another and ignite more trenchant and powerful ones. As directed by Jim Simpson and with Bebe Neuwirth and Jeffrey DeMunn to play the more mature members of the ensemble, and Jenn Harris and James Waterston as a second man and woman, the loosely connected pieces are presented with stylish good humor and the right mix of disquieting perplexity. Some parts of this theatrical potpourri work better than others so that the sum total pretty much lives up to the drolly honest by-line: "almost a play by Roger Rosenblatt." Not surprisingly, the humor often veers to the political and when it does it's again not unexpected for the laughs to come at the expense of the Republicans. The political riffs are well done and the sort of stuff Flea regulars tend to eat up. They even include a torchy song from Neuwirth and a jazzy number from Waterston. However, delightful as it is to have Neuwirth singing, and fun as the song "Ashcroft" is, the tune's subject has already spent his ten minutes of cabinet post fame and a less hip audience might already be more vague about Ashcroft than Ashley Montana. But then again, how can you resist a rhyme like "I know that he's the only man for me./I'm nuts for his conservativity./His principles are hogwash./He isn't very smart./But nothing rhymes With Ashcroft but my heart." Waterston's "Black and Blue," in which he takes on the persona of the recently deposed head of FEMA, Michael D. Brown, has a snappy, last-minute script addition flavor, but this number too would, like any material in a current events related show, need updating in a future life. Still, political humor by an Emmy award winning writer and with a glamorous Broadway star like Neuwirth hopping onto a piano to sing -- all for a $15 ticket! -- is it really necessary to have everything work perfectly? Speaking of perfect, that adjective applies to all the performances. Neuwirth is a fine comic actress as well as singer. Jeffrey DeMunn is especially good with the more plaintive material; for example, a downsized worker's touching soliloquy. In another more anxiety than laughter provoking solo, Waterston assumes the daunting role of the Grim Reaper explaining himself and at the same time putting some common myths to rest -- including the reaper's grimness ("I am neither grim nor amiable. Sad to report, I don't have much of a personality at all"). As Woman #2, Jenn Harris, who was the best reason to see last season's Modern Orthodox, fully lives up to the comic potential of her show-stopping late arrival in that play. Not to be denied a round of applause is percussionist Christopher Lipton, who at one point comes out from behind that venetian blind screen and interacts with the ensemble. It is almost inevitable that the jumps from topic to topic and the highly stylized production would make this "almost play" at times feel as overly extended as its title. (Neuwirth's and DeMunn's sketch about a couple who retire to Staten Island goes on way too long). But you won't get a chance to see four terrific actors deliver enough amusing and bemusing dialogue to make Ashley Montana (at least until the end of its as of now limited run) one of New York City's true theater bargains.
|
Easy-on-the budget super gift for yourself and your musical loving friends. Tons of gorgeous pictures. >6, 500 Comparative Phrases including 800 Shakespearean Metaphors by our editor. Click image to buy. Go here for details and larger image. |