Wednesday, January 07, 2009

Second Chance: Broadway's Cyrano Revival On PBS

Second Chance: Broadway's Cyrano Revival On PBS

If you weren't able to catch the mostly captivating 2007 Broadway revival of Edmond Rostand's classic Cyrano de Bergerac, you'll have your opportunity this evening when PBS broadcasts the David Leveaux-helmed translation from Anthony Burgess as part of its "Great Performances" series.

The main attraction here is clearly Kevin Kline. Regular readers may recall that I singled out his extraordinary turn in the title role for high praise in my November 6, 2007 SOB Review:
Kline firmly centers the show with his nuanced and understated performance that's breathtaking to behold. Seemingly without effort, he manages one of those rare spine-tingling feats of the stage...
While I wasn't exactly enamored with Jennifer Garner's Broadway debut, I still gave the show three out of four stars, as well as props to the film and television actress for her critically important final scene. And in a bit of serendipity, the actress just became a mother yet again just yesterday.

With Kline's "Great Performance" in mind, I would certainly recommend this for your viewing pleasure. PBS' "Great Performances" is scheduled to begin at 8:00 p.m. EST, but be sure to check your local television listings.

This is Steve On Broadway (SOB).

Labels: , , , , , , , , ,

Tuesday, November 06, 2007

Cyrano de Bergerac (The SOB Review)

Cyrano de Bergerac (The SOB Review) - Richard Rodgers Theatre, New York, NY

*** (out of ****)

It's more than a little ironic that Kevin Kline as Cyrano de Bergerac should exclaim, "My success is only achieved by excess!"

For despite the ungainly prosthesis of the proboscis Kline dons in the title role -- and in spite of Jennifer Garner's completely over-the-top acting -- Kline firmly centers the show with his nuanced and understated performance that's breathtaking to behold. Seemingly without effort, he manages one of those rare spine-tingling feats of the stage that more than offsets all the other major issues I had with the show, ranging from Garner's considerable egregiously exaggerated excesses, as well as something downright tinny and hollow in David Van Tiegham's sound design.

Although I was familiar with Cyrano's story of unrequited love for his cousin Roxane (Garner) and how he aids the equally smitten yet tongue-tied Christian De Neuvillette (a rather benign Daniel Sunjata) express both of their love through written and spoken verse, this was my first time ever seeing Edmond Rostand's classic play performed.

I enjoyed it largely due to Kline's superb performance and Tom Pye's intoxicating stage design, as well as Gregory Gale's exquisite costume design and haunting illumination from Don Holder. If nothing else, it's a sumptuous feast for the eyes.

While David Leveaux's largely crisp direction makes this Anthony Burgess adaptation captivating enough -- he certainly motors the show along -- he doesn't seem to make equal demands of his cast. With the exception of Kline, Max Baker (animated as Ragueneaua, the pastry cook) and Euan Morton (pitch-perfect in his dual roles as Lignière and Théophraste Renaudot), the rest of the lot borders on the banal.

As Comte de Guiche, Chris Sarandon comes off as merely one-dimensional -- a villain in name only, incapable of stirring up any real passion. Despite his "pretty face," Sunjata never really shows much charm or comic panache required for the role.

And then there's Jennifer Garner, whose forced performance is so stultifying that you'd be forgiven for thinking she was deliberately trying to be bad. Each overblown gesticulation was upstaged by the type of reading akin to the parodies of the novice actor in a production of Shakespeare. Yes, she's a natural beauty, but it's a mystery why anyone would be attracted to her after she speaks.

But all of this is rather muted, curiously enough, whenever Kline takes to the stage to add his voice. And in the poignant final moments of the play when Garner finally seems in tune with Kline's marvelous cadences, electrifying chills swept through me. I was moved by the grace of two actors in concert -- at last -- with each other.

This is Steve On Broadway (SOB).

Click here for tickets.
Related Stories:
Cyrano Critics Offer Thumbs Down By A Nose (November 2, 2007)
Opening Night By A Nose (November 1, 2007)
Cyrano On Broadway: In-Klined To Garner Success? (August 2, 2007)

Labels: , , , , , , , , ,

Friday, November 02, 2007

Cyrano Critics Offer Thumbs Down By A Nose

Cyrano Critics Offer Thumbs Down By A Nose

Critics were decidedly mixed on the merits of reviving Cyrano de Bergerac for the twelfth time on Broadway. Under David Leveaux's direction, Edmond Rostand's classic opened last night at the Richard Rodgers Theatre and stars Kevin Kline in the title role with Jennifer Garner as Roxane.

Calling the show "a double shot of silvery hokum, sweet but surprisingly potent," The New York Times' Ben Brantley offers -- perhaps astoundingly -- the single most positive review: "(Leveaux) is the perfect man to bring Cyrano into the 21st century, presenting the play’s flowery sensibility without making audiences feel they’ve been doused in perfume.... Mr. Kline knows what he’s doing. His bluster-free take on a man of bluster grows on you by stealth, and once you’re used to it, it makes wonderfully good sense....Ms. Garner, I am pleased to report, makes Roxane a girl worth pining over."

Positing that Cyrano is one of those plays that "wear their elegance within," Linda Winer of Newsday is mostly upbeat: "Kline, arguably New York's best argument for a popular classical theater, is not the only deeply satisfying pleasure in Cyrano de Bergerac....Jennifer Garner has moved with astonishing grace from being a TV double-agent in "Alias" to making her Broadway debut as Roxane....Garner, who studied theater before TV and movies snapped her up, breaks the recent Broadway curse of the Hollywood stars. With a lamb face and long serious bones, she flips comfortably from the comic to the plucky and, finally, to the heroic."

Despite deadpanning "A great play, it isn't," New York Post's Clive Barnes summons up some good things to say in his two-and-a-half star review: "In the Cyrano that opened last night, Kline dishes out panache, clashes swords, flashes wicked grins and, finally, dampens hankies with the best of them. But there is more to Cyrano than braggadocio and sentimentality, as the great Sir Ralph Richardson first demonstrated more years ago than I care to calculate, and now Kline helps confirm....[I]f you just go to see Kline, battling against all odds -- and, even while looking far too handsome, acting his good-natured heart out -- you will certainly get your money's worth."

Criticizing it as an "only intermittently effective revival," David Rooney of Variety delivers a less-than-glowing critique: "We get gorgeous stage pictures and an eloquent if oddly low-energy performance in the title role from Kevin Kline but not much in the way of real passion....In contrast to the bold design statements, Leveaux imposes a modern, naturalistic feel on a play that should thrum with melodramatic grandness and hyperbole. It's all a little tame and sober: Even the soaring declarations of love lack intensity."

Saying "It looks expensive, and it feels cheap," Eric Grode of the New York Sun delivers a solid pan: "Kevin Kline doesn't do a blessed thing wrong in the title role of Cyrano de Bergerac. And, as his whip-smart inamorata, Roxane, Jennifer Garner does almost nothing right. Yet David Leveaux's boisterous revival of Edmond Rostand's 1897 swords-and-sobs verse drama never offers the lift one can receive from great or, in those rare but almost as unforgettable moments, terrible theater. It just lumbers around the stage, dragging along a slew of staggering drunkards, giggling wenches and preening soldiers like so many stray puppies. It looks expensive, and it feels cheap."

Labeling the production "emotionally stillborn," Joe Dziemianowicz of New York's Daily News also heaps on the scorn: "The listlessness of the three-hour production is all the more disappointing since Edmond Rostand's 1897 play is rich with drama, comedy, romance and even swashbuckling....(Kline is) never larger-than-life thrilling, and that's what's needed to make the story soar. It doesn't help that Kline gets swallowed up in the cavernous playing area devised by director David Leveaux....Jennifer Garner...brings her natural beauty to Roxane, but she's miscast....As Christian, Daniel Sunjata...is okay-looking, but he rivals an onstage leafless tree for stark woodenness."

So with these reviews in mind, I'll be taking in a performance of the play over the next few days and will provide my own SOB Review shortly thereafter. The limited run of Cyrano de Bergerac is scheduled to run through December 23.

This is Steve On Broadway (SOB).

Click here for tickets.
Related Stories:
Opening Night By A Nose (November 1, 2007)
Cyrano On Broadway: In-Klined To Garner Success? (August 2, 2007)

Labels: , , , , , , , , ,

Thursday, November 01, 2007

Opening Night By A Nose

Opening Night By A Nose

It's been 23 years since Cyrano de Bergerac was last performed on the Great White Way. In the 1984 production -- the 11th revival of Edmond Rostand's classic play about love and a very large proboscis -- Derek Jacobi portrayed Cyrano to Sinéad Cusack's Roxane.

Tonight, the 13th incarnation opens at the Richard Rodgers Theatre. With David Leveaux at the helm, Kevin Kline takes on the titular role while Mrs. Ben Affleck (Jennifer Garner) portrays Roxane. It also marks happy Broadway returns for Daniel Sunjata (last seen in 2003's Take Me Out), Euan Morton (Taboo) and Chris Sarandon (The Light In The Piazza).

Although Walter Hampden had the title role for each of the five revivals spanning 1923 to 1936, it was José Ferrer who famously made the role his own in both the 1946 revival and the 1950 film version. Not only did Ferrer wind up taking home the very first Tony Award for Best Actor in a Dramatic Role (he was up against just one other actor -- Fredric March -- in Years Ago), but he also won the Best Actor Oscar a few years later.

As much as Ferrer became synonymous with the character, his was merely the eighth revival of the play, which was first produced on Broadway all the way back in 1898 at the Garden Theatre.

Will the thirteenth time prove lucky for Kline and company? Find out tomorrow as I provide a critics' capsule.

Cyrano de Bergerac's limited run ends on December 21.

This is Steve On Broadway (SOB).

Click here for tickets.
Related Stories:
Cyrano On Broadway: In-Klined To Garner Success? (August 2, 2007)

Labels: , , , , , , , , ,

Thursday, August 02, 2007

Cyrano On Broadway: In-Klined To Garner Success?

Cyrano On Broadway: In-Klined To Garner Success?

According to Michael Riedel of the New York Post, Kevin Kline appears to be inclined to take on one of the greatest romantic comedy roles of all time: Cyrano de Bergerac.

Riedel reports that David Leveaux would helm the 12th Broadway revival of Edmond Rostand's classic play about the guy with the unusually large nose.

Perhaps most noteworthy in Riedel's report is that Mrs. Ben Affleck (Jennifer Garner) might "return" to the Great White Way as Roxanne -- she previously served as an understudy to Patricia T. A. Ageheim in 1995's A Month In The Country.

Perhaps this is what Alan Ayckbourn meant? And if she's ready to tread the boards, can her hubby be far behind?

This is Steve On Broadway (SOB).

Related Stories:
The Empire Strikes Back! (January 26, 2007)

Labels: , , , , , , , , ,

Technorati blog directory Blog Directory & Search engine
Visitor Map

Powered by FeedBurner