Monday, January 25, 2010

Race (The SOB Review)

Race (The SOB Review) - Ethel Barrymore Theatre, New York City, New York

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


Rarely in my decades of theatregoing have I been as absolutely repulsed or so thoroughly infuriated by a play as I have been by the incendiary polemics embodied within David Mamet's Race.

Not since Avenue Q has everyone been called just a little bit racist. Ever the provocateur, Mamet has raised the stakes exponentially in this racially-infused drama about a wealthy white man (a limp, miscast Richard Thomas) accused of raping an African-American woman and the ensuing behind-the-scenes legal wrangling (and accompanying hand-wringing) by his mixed race defense team consisting of Jack (James Spader), Henry (David Alan Grier) and Susan (an ineffectual Kerry Washington).

While both Spader and Grier acquit themselves with solid performances, their characters' diatribes are guilty of making the same sort of sweeping generalizations you might have expected a couple generations ago. By virtually ridiculing any progress America has made in improving race relations, Mamet effectively sets the clock back on what has been achieved by suggesting it's been completely specious. It's a disgrace and one in which I wanted to stand up and shout to Spader that his jerk of an attorney didn't speak for me or any of my friends.

How dare David Mamet lob this provocative time-warped bomb on us? Can't we all just get along? I dare say, most of us already are. But I would remind Mamet that when you're busy pointing your finger at your audience, there are always three pointing right back at you.

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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Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Race To The Start

Race To The Start

There's no disputing that with five of his plays having trod Broadway's boards over as many recent years, playwright, screenwriter and provocateur David Mamet is back with a vengeance.

Now, the world premiere for his latest work Race is set to begin previews November 16 at Rialto's Ethel Barrymore Theatre, the same venue that gave birth to the Broadway premieres of Mamet's American Buffalo (1977) and November (2008), as well as the acclaimed revival of Speed-The-Plow (2008-09). Marking Mamet's directorial debut on the Great White Way, Race will open December 6 for an open-ended engagement.

While the contents of Race are highly secretive, there's no doubt it's another super-charged, combustible work. Indeed, the play's advertising campaign succinctly describes Race:

From Pulitzer Prize winner David Mamet, comes his most explosive four-letter word yet. Race.
And they're not talking about a sporting event in which humans, horses or cars circle around a track. With David Alan Grier, James Spader, Richard Thomas and Kerry Washington on deck, it's safe to say that this show revolves, at least in part, around the color of one's skin.

While not tipping his hat regarding the plot, Thomas has been quoted by blogger Jon Sobel saying Race is:

so complex, so many perspectives -- to talk about the plot would be reductive. A quick summation would make it seem much simpler than it is. It's about things that no one says. It's strong stuff. Provocative, but not shocking for the sake of being shocking.
As Mamet enjoys a renaissance with a decidedly less liberal voice, my curiosity is once again piqued. I loved Speed-The-Plow and was quite blown away by the current Broadway revival of Oleanna, but I wasn't quite as enthused by Mamet's last new work November.

Still, as one of America's foremost playwrights, Mamet is likely to challenge your mind in a Race to the finish.

This is Steve On Broadway (SOB).

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