HOME PAGE SITE GUIDE REVIEWS FEATURES NEWS Etcetera and Short Term Listings LISTINGS Broadway Off-Broadway NYC Restaurants BOOKS and CDs OTHER PLACES Berkshires London California DC Philadelphia Elsewhere QUOTES On TKTS PLAYWRIGHTS' ALBUMS LETTERS TO EDITOR FILM LINKS MISCELLANEOUS Free Updates Masthead Writing for Us SEARCH |
A CurtainUp Review
The Necklace
By Julia Furay
Serial dramas are not something likely to be seen on stage. Unless you head for the Ohio Theater in SoHo where The Talking Band's new eight-part serial drama The Necklace is playing -- with each episode a self-contained theater piece and four different playwrights contributing. Judging from the first two episodes that I saw you can expect to be continually surprised and not just because it leaves you wondering whodunit. Sure, the show is comprised of the usual suspects: A musty old mansion, complete with secret passageways and hidden rooms. A devoted old butler with a secret. A windy moor. Mysterious strangers. Ghosts.Hard-bitten detectives. And, of course, a stolen necklace. The Necklace plays with all of these conventionional elements -- and adds a few of its own. The result is more an enjoyable exploration of mystery and ghostliness than an attempt to solve anything. (Think Wuthering Heights, not Nancy Drew.) An air of mystery is evoked even before the lights dim as audience members have to walk through Anna Kiraly's dark, evocative set with its spooky nooks and crannies to get to their seats. They then meet Fanny (Tina Shepard), the old lady who owns the necklace in question, her butler, and Theo, and a young boy she dreams of, who seems to be a ghost (Ian Holloway). Any expectations for an old-fashioned thriller vanish when the pushy suburban neighbor (Jodi Lin) and a pair of snotty, modern 16-year-olds (Suli Holum and Katie Pearl) make their entrance. The underscoring throughout (composed by Peter Gordon) is another example of the unexpected. It sounds like a score from an old thriller movie but ends up with a most unusual sound. The large cast adds to the pleasures on offer. Particularly impressive are Shepard (whose Fanny seems to live on memory alone) and David Brooks as Donald, a young orphan constantly meeting strangers and ghosts. With four different authors the quality and style of each installment is bound to vary a great deal which was indeed the case with the first two segments that I saw. The very funny House Out of Sync by Lisa D'Amour showed off the sure handed directorial talents of Anne Kauffman and Melissa Kievman but it took Paul Zimet's Shadow Passports to make the mysteries and characters more interesting and vivid. Zimet contributes onstage as well as off (he plays the wizened and paranoid butler, John). Free standing though these plays are, seeing one set of playlets is likely to whet your appetite to tune in some more. With that in mind, the production notes below include the full schedule.
|
Stage Plays
The Internet Theatre Bookshop "Virtually Every Play in the World" --even out of print plays Easy-on-the budget super gift for yourself and your musical loving friends. Tons of gorgeous pictures. Leonard Maltin's 2005 Movie Guide 6, 500 Comparative Phrases including 800 Shakespearean Metaphors by our editor. Click image to buy. Go here for details and larger image. |