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"Wonderland"

"The Book of Mormon"

"Catch Me..."

"Priscilla"

"Motherf--ker with a Hat"

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"Fanny Brice"

First Person: Greenberg

Two-shows-for-one-price

2011 Outer Critics Circle

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"Hair" Returning to B'way

Samuel L. Jackson Debuts

"Billy Elliott" Milestone

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"Singin' in the Rain"

"2011 Obie Awards"

Leslie Kritzer--Joe's Pub

2011 Tony Nominees

"Mark Twain..."

"The Addams Family"

"Klea Backhurst...."

Linda Eder Concert Coming

"NEO" at York Theater

"Holy Crap" on stage

"A Funny Thing..."

Tony Kushner,CynthiaNixon

"A Little Night Music"

"Helen on 86th Street"

See "Br'way Blogspot"

"Scottsboro Boys"

Ulttimate Sondheim Set

"Lost in Yonkers"

"Brighton Beach Memoirs"

"God of Carnage"

"In the Heights"

"Most Likely To...:

"The Norman Conquests"

"Mary Stuart"

"Shrek--The Musical"

Where "Godspell" Goes...

Renaming the Biltmore

"Brigadoon" Vanishing?

"Grease"

"Gypsy"

"Cry-Baby"

"A Catered Affair"

"Kiss Me Kate"

Children's Letters to God

"Meet Me in St. Louis"

"Naked Boys Singing"

"Buddy"

"The Joys of Sex"

"My Fair Lady"

R.I.P., "Rent"

"Theater Boys"

"A Reader Writes..."

Mary Louise Parker--Hedda

"Seven Little Foys"

"The Deciders"

"China..."

"Down Around Brown Town"

"Revolution on the Roof"

"Tiny Feats..."

"A Man, A Magic, A Music"

"Johnny Law"

"The Women's Project"

Frank Langela Returning

News from Williamstown

Cabaret Festival Coming!

News: MTC New Play Commis

SANDRA BERNHARDT RETURNS

Breaking News

Broadway at Town Hall

AUDITIONS

Obie Award Winners

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"A Catered Affair" (at the Walter Kerr Theatre)
 
The new show  at Broadway's Walter Kerr Theatre, "A Catered Affair," with a book by Harvey Fierstein and songs by John Bucchino, is a taut, sensitive, intelligently written, understated drama with music. Fierstein’s words and Bucchino’s songs seem very much of a piece. Generously, in this play Fierstein has actually written better roles for others than for himself.

The action centers around two parents (portrayed by Tom Wopat and Faith Prince), planning a wedding for their daughter (Leslie Kritzer). It is 1953, their son has just died in the Korean War, and they are considering spending all they can afford—and then some—to give their daughter one memorable day. The performances by Prince, Kritzer, and Wopat are utterly believable. Wopat’s work comes, in fact, as a revelation. He displays a depth, a gravitas he’s had no opportunity to display before. The tension between the characters played by Wopat and Prince, trapped in a loveless marriage, feels totally true to life. Fierstein gets some nice moments as a gay uncle, but his character (properly) is marginal to the central story.
 
This play-sized musical, directed by John Doyle, is based on a 1950s Paddy Chayefsky teleplay (which was subsequently adapted for the screen by Gore Vidal.) And it preserves the tone and feel of a Chayefsky drama. It’s not going to be for everyone. (If you want a musical that feels like a rock concert, look elsewhere.) It’s a decidely low-key piece. But it’s honest, and thought-provoking, and offers its own quiet rewards.

--L. D.
 


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