Thursday, October 28, 2010

Lombardi (The SOB Review)

Lombardi (The SOB Review) - Circle in the Square Theatre, New York, New York

**1/2 (out of ****)

Want to see a grown man cry?

I'm talking about the type of guy who religiously spends each and every Sunday afternoon watching pro football, either in person or in the comfort of his own living room. You know the kind. One who likely never had Broadway, let alone live theatre, on his radar screen.

That is, until the NFL-produced Lombardi entered the field of new shows opening on the Great White Way this fall. The outpouring of emotions all around me in the audience from those very types of grown men was palpable. So choked up was one gentleman seated behind me that he began sobbing near the end of the play as it became clear that -- just as in real life -- there would be no happy ending for Vince Lombardi. And when the lights came on, there were plenty of other men with red eyes in the house.

If there's one lesson to be gleaned from the sturdy, yet astonishingly vincible Lombardi, which opened last week on Broadway, it isn't that someone other than Vince Lombardi coined the phrase, "Winning isn't everything -- it's the only thing." No, it's that the revered football coach who turned around the Green Bay Packers isn't some outlandish hagiographic caricature. Instead, to his credit, playwright Eric Simonson offers a Lombardi who is very human and highly fallible.

Fortuanately, director Thomas Kail has the winning Dan Lauria on his team tackling the title role. So effective is Lauria that his imposing presence is felt onstage even when he's not on it. Additionally, his uncanny resemblance to Lombardi is astounding. As the coach's long-suffering wife Marie, the intoxicatingly droll Judith Light pours wry observations along with wit that's every bit as dry as the martinis she's constantly swilling.

Yet somehow, this likable Lombardi feels incomplete. If Lombardi is not quite the touchdown Simonson and Kail have strived for, it's largely because they haven't provided a level playing field. Much, perhaps too much, attention in this playbook is given to the coach's fierce devotion to teamwork, but it comes at the expense of providing any real nuance to Lombardi himself. The very heart of what made this coach a true champion is fumbled, relying too heavily on exposition from the huddle of Marie and team members, as well as a fictitious journalist, to fill in what few blanks the playwright allows.

But ask the guys around me at Lombardi if all that matters, and I'll bet they'd insist I simply made a bad call on the play.

This is Steve On Broadway (SOB).



In keeping with the new Federal Trade Commission (FTC) regulations that unfairly discriminate against bloggers, who are now required by law to disclose when they have received anything of value they might write about, please note that I have received nothing of value in exchange for this post.

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Monday, September 20, 2010

For Lombardi On Broadway, Winning Is The Only Thing


For Lombardi On Broadway, Winning Is The Only Thing

You may think that Broadway and football go together about as well as chocolate and tuna fish.

So how do you inspire football fans to seek out a Great White Way production? Very craftily, as it turns out.

In her insightful Theatre Development Fund (TDF) story, Linda Buchwald examines the dilemma facing the marketers for Eric Simonson's Lombardi, which is hoping to score a winning touchdown on Broadway this fall. The show is using advertising on sites like the NFL's, along with social networking via YouTube, Facebook and Twitter as cheerleaders capable of bringing football fans into a new, albeit significantly smaller "arena" -- Broadway's intimate Circle in the Square Theatre.

Simonson's new play is based on Pulitzer Prize-winning author David Maraniss' biography "When Pride Still Mattered: A Life of Vince Lombardi." The gridiron drama stars Dan Lauria ("The Wonder Years") in his Broadway debut as the iconic Green Bay Packers coach and stage veteran Judith Light ("Who's The Boss") as his wife Marie.

Coached by director Thomas Kail in a most unlikely follow-up to his Tony-nominated work for In The Heights, Lombardi's team also includes Bill Dawes as Heisman Trophy winner and future Hall of Famer Paul Hornung, Keith Nobbs as Michael McCormick, Robert Christopher Riley as Packer Dave Robinson and Chris Sullivan as Hall of Famer Jim Taylor.

The Lombardi Web site describes the play as follows:
Sport produces great human drama and there is no greater sports icon to bring to theatrical life than Hall of Fame football coach Vince Lombardi, unquestionably one of the most inspirational and quotable personalities of all time. Dan Lauria ("The Wonder Years") and two-time Emmy Award winner Judith Light head the cast of Lombardi, a new American play by Academy Award winner and Steppenwolf Theatre Company member Eric Simonson. Though football’s Super Bowl trophy is named for him, few know the real story of Lombardi the man -- his inspirations, his passions and ability to drive people to achieve what they never thought possible.

To any naysayers, I'd just remind you that as the New York Jets' quarterback Mark Sanchez demonstrated at this year's Tony Awards, the respective fan bases of Broadway and football need not be exclusive. We'll see next month whether Lombardi can score with critics and audiences alike. But as a proud cheesehead myself, I'm certainly game to be cheering on Lombardi.

Previews for this open-ended run begin September 23, 2010, with opening night slated for October 21.

This is Steve On Broadway (SOB).


In keeping with the new Federal Trade Commission (FTC) regulations that unfairly discriminate against bloggers, who are now required by law to disclose when they have received anything of value they might write about, please note that I have received nothing of value in exchange for this post.

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