by Jack Gohn | Jun 22, 2016 | The Close Up, Theater Reviews and Commentary
I know a gripping mythos when I see one. This is the real deal. If you have the kind of imagination that responds to graphic novels and Game of Thrones, this one is for you. You will find yourself transported for three hours into a world completely different from our own, but it is nevertheless detailed, dramatically coherent, and totally absorbing.
by Jack Gohn | May 26, 2016 | The Close Up, Theater Reviews and Commentary
Fever Dream: Streetcar at Everyman Posted on BroadwayWorld.com April 18, 2016 Tennessee Williams’ A Streetcar Named Desire is atmospheric, outsized, swampy, passionate, quirky, in short Southern Gothic. In most respects, Streetcar is therefore the polar opposite... by Jack Gohn | Apr 23, 2016 | The Close Up, Theater Reviews and Commentary
Morisseau’s explanation of the Detroit riots makes a lot of sense, and resonates with my understanding of what happened last year in Baltimore. Morisseau’s thesis is that the black citizens of Detroit were not crazy, just reacting to an ongoing culture of police abuse, and that abusive police and military responses were to blame for most of what went wrong once the spark of protest had been struck by the raid of an unlicensed after-hours drinking club known as a ‘blind pig.’
by Jack Gohn | Jan 31, 2016 | The Close Up, Theater Reviews and Commentary
If you view this production as an entertainment for those whose taste runs to Mad Max, to Rocky Horror, and to the movies of Quentin Tarantino (none of which I’m knocking, but let’s not call them Shakespeare), then this may be a lark for you.
by Jack Gohn | Jan 31, 2016 | The Close Up, Theater Reviews and Commentary
There is no perfect way to realize Shakespeare’s vision, but employing an all-female cast is apt to be among the less successful ways. In the alternative, you can say the hell with realizing Shakespeare’s vision, and simply have fun with your own. And that, I think, is the approach that director Wendy C. Goldberg has chosen to pursue at Center Stage