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Terry Teachout on the arts in New York City

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Archives for April 16, 2013

TT: Tears of a clown

April 16, 2013 by Terry Teachout

So many shows are opening on Broadway this week and next that The Wall Street Journal has given me extra review slots to accommodate the overflow. In today’s paper I review The Nance and Motown, the first enthusiastically, the second sulfurously. Here’s an excerpt.
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One o the most exciting things that a well-produced play can do is serve as a time machine, giving present-day audiences a privileged glimpse of the lost world of the past. That’s what Douglas Carter Beane does in “The Nance,” a dead-serious comedy set in New York circa 1937 in which Nathan Lane plays a self-hating gay man who makes a living playing outrageously effeminate gay men on the burlesque stage. Such comedians were known as “nances,” and most of them were straight. The paradox that drives “The Nance,” by contrast, is that Chauncey Miles, Mr. Lane’s character, is the real thing–but that he lives in an age when his own sexuality is not merely unmentionable but illegal. It’s an immensely promising premise, and Messrs. Beane and Lane, aided to the utmost by Jack O’Brien, the director, make the most of it.
tn-500_screenshot2013-04-01at2.10.38pm.jpgProduced on Broadway by Lincoln Center Theater, “The Nance” is a two-layered play in which authentic-sounding burlesque routines concocted by Mr. Beane and Glen Kelly, who wrote the original music, alternate with backstage scenes that show us in agonizing detail what Chauncey’s emotionally starved private life is like. A straight-ticket Republican (“Say something nice about Roosevelt and prepare to have your eyes scratched out”) who bristles at the very mention of socialism, he prefers his sex anonymous and takes it wherever he can find it….
Mr. Beane’s previous plays and musical-comedy books have been by turns repellently bitchy (“The Little Dog Laughed,” “Mr. and Mrs. Fitch”) and cloyingly campy (“Lysistrata Jones,” “Xanadu”). Not so “The Nance,” in which he’s found a way to use the campiness that is his primary theatrical color to relevant and moving effect. It helps immeasurably, of course, that Mr. Lane is giving the kind of richly realized performance of which playwrights dream…
Berry Gordy, the Oz of Motown Records, has now given us an autobiographical jukebox musical called, naturally enough, “Motown: The Musical.” It’s a vanity production in all senses of the word, since Mr. Gordy wrote the book himself. The results should have been called “The Genius of Me: How I Singlehandedly Transformed American Culture, Made a Gazillion Dollars and Slept With Diana Ross.” If you’re willing to sit through two hours and 45 minutes’ worth of unbridled self-love, you’ll get to see a stageful of actors pretending to be Mr. Gordy, Ms. Ross, Marvin Gaye, Michael Jackson, Smokey Robinson, Stevie Wonder and other such folk. The songs are great, the performances predictably predictable, the sets stupefyingly expensive….
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Read the whole thing here.

TT: Almanac

April 16, 2013 by Terry Teachout

“Everyone is more or less mad on one point.”
Rudyard Kipling, “On the Strength of a Likeness”

Terry Teachout

Terry Teachout, who writes this blog, is the drama critic of The Wall Street Journal and the critic-at-large of Commentary. In addition to his Wall Street Journal drama column and his monthly essays … [Read More...]

About

About “About Last Night”

This is a blog about the arts in New York City and the rest of America, written by Terry Teachout. Terry is a critic, biographer, playwright, director, librettist, recovering musician, and inveterate blogger. In addition to theater, he writes here and elsewhere about all of the other arts--books, … [Read More...]

About My Plays and Opera Libretti

Billy and Me, my second play, received its world premiere on December 8, 2017, at Palm Beach Dramaworks in West Palm Beach, Fla. Satchmo at the Waldorf, my first play, closed off Broadway at the Westside Theatre on June 29, 2014, after 18 previews and 136 performances. That production was directed … [Read More...]

About My Podcast

Peter Marks, Elisabeth Vincentelli, and I are the panelists on “Three on the Aisle,” a bimonthly podcast from New York about theater in America. … [Read More...]

About My Books

My latest book is Duke: A Life of Duke Ellington, published in 2013 by Gotham Books in the U.S. and the Robson Press in England and now available in paperback. I have also written biographies of Louis Armstrong, George Balanchine, and H.L. Mencken, as well as a volume of my collected essays called A … [Read More...]

The Long Goodbye

To read all three installments of "The Long Goodbye," a multi-part posting about the experience of watching a parent die, go here. … [Read More...]

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