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About Last Night

Terry Teachout on the arts in New York City

TT: Just an old-fashioned con man

August 31, 2007 by Terry Teachout

Today’s Wall Street Journal drama column is half New York, half not. From East Haddam, Connecticut, I report on a rare revival of High Button Shoes by Goodspeed Musicals. Off Broadway, it’s Charles Mee’s Iphigenia 2.0. How’s that for an incongruous pairing? Anyway, here goes nothing:

Long before Phil Silvers was Sgt. Bilko, he was stopping the show as Harrison Floy, the old-time con man who is the star of “High Button Shoes,” one of the biggest musical-comedy hits of 1947. It ran for 727 performances, brought choreographer Jerome Robbins his first Tony–and then, like so many other well-received musicals, disappeared into the theatrical memory hole. Except for two numbers restaged by Robbins 42 years later for “Jerome Robbins’ Broadway,” “High Button Shoes” has never been revived in New York. Goodspeed Musicals, which regularly exhumes forgotten shows, put it on in 1982, but that appears to be the only time the show has been produced anywhere since its original Broadway run. Now Goodspeed is giving “High Button Shoes” a second outing at its handsome headquarters, an immaculately preserved 1876 opera house overlooking the Connecticut River. I drove up there the other day to satisfy my longstanding curiosity about a long-forgotten musical and discovered, to my delight, that “High Button Shoes” is not for antiquarians only….
I’m not in the habit of praising stridently political drama, but I know a good thing when I see one, and Charles Mee’s “Iphigenia 2.0,” a contemporary rewrite of Euripides’ “Iphigenia in Aulis” in which the audience is tacitly invited to reflect on the hubris and downfall of George W. Bush, is an avant-garde spectacular that is more than sufficiently exciting to overcome any objections you may have to onstage sermonizing.

No free link, he sighed. Get thee to a newsstand, or go here to subscribe to the Online Journal. (If you’re already a subscriber, the column is here.)

TT: Jammin’ with Toscanini’s hep cats

August 31, 2007 by Terry Teachout

My enthusiasm over the release of The New Friends of Rhythm: 1939-1947 Performances (about which you can read more in the Top Five section of the right-hand column) has spilled over into a “Sightings” column for Saturday’s The Wall Street Journal. In it I fill in the background of this fascinating group, which briefly became so popular that it got written up in Time. Then I take a broader look at the larger phenomenon of jazzing-the-classics recordings, and offer some speculations on what its decline tells us about the shaky state of classical music in America.
To find out more–including what Ayn Rand, of all people, had to say about jazzed-up classics–pick up a copy of the Saturday Journal and turn to the newly re-christened “Weekend Journal.” I’ll be there.
UPDATE: Subscribers to the Online Journal can read this column by going here.

TT: Almanac

August 31, 2007 by Terry Teachout

“Barbarism is the absence of standards to which appeal can be made.”
José Ortega y Gasset, The Revolt of the Masses

CAAF: Toolahroolah, MVY. Howdy, Indiana.

August 30, 2007 by cfrye

My companions at Martha’s Vineyard, Hortense and Boozy, used to work together as editors at a publishing house in New York. One of their work jokes was a video concept called “Girls in Publishing Gone Wild,” which would feature scintillating footage of girls who wear glasses unbuttoning their cardigans and struggling to extricate themselves from their turtlenecks as buds of crumpled Kleenex emerged provocatively from their shirt cuffs.
Our weekend together had a similar quality. We drank a lot of tea, and stayed up late watching Room With A View and eating candy-colored macaroons from Chelsea. At the beach, we clambered around talking about Enid Blyton and Isabella Blow. We visited three bookstores, and my souvenirs from the trip are roughed-up copies of John Barth’s Giles Goat-Boy and a book called The Sea-Horse and Its Relatives. The latter, written by two Australian museum curators and published in 1958, reads like something a character in Wodehouse might write. A chapter called “Interesting Habits” begins, “What is the most remarkable member of the Animal Kingdom? Few would disagree with awarding the palm to the female of the human species, but of all the marine creatures, as Sir J. Arthur Thomson has written, Sea-horses … ‘are the most “kenspeckle” creatures of the sea, and this is saying a good deal …'” Indeed.
This weekend I’m traveling again, this time to the Wienerschnitzel family reunion. This is a reunion of my mom’s umpteen brothers and sisters held biennially on my grandfather’s farm in southern Indiana. Lots of croquet and volleyball, and gathering in the living room to hear my musical cousin pound out “House of the Rising Sun” on the piano. As the finale, the uncles, who will have been drinking beer in the barn all afternoon, will troop out to a distant field and set off fireworks for the delight of the crowd that is watching, amid fragrant clouds of bug spray, on the lawn — a display that always marks for me the official close of summer.

TT: So you want to see a show?

August 30, 2007 by Terry Teachout

Here’s my list of recommended Broadway and off-Broadway shows, updated weekly. In all cases, I gave these shows favorable reviews in The Wall Street Journal when they opened. For more information, click on the title.


Warning: Broadway shows marked with an asterisk were sold out, or nearly so, last week.


BROADWAY:

• Avenue Q (musical, R, adult subject matter and one show-stopping scene of puppet-on-puppet sex, reviewed here)

• A Chorus Line * (musical, PG-13/R, adult subject matter, reviewed here)

• The Drowsy Chaperone (musical, G/PG-13, mild sexual content and a profusion of double entendres, reviewed here)

• Grease (musical, PG-13, some sexual content, reviewed here)

• The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee (musical, PG-13, mostly family-friendly but contains a smattering of strong language and a production number about an unwanted erection, reviewed here)


OFF BROADWAY:

• The Fantasticks (musical, G, suitable for children old enough to enjoy a love story, reviewed here)


CLOSING NEXT WEEK:

• A Midsummer Night’s Dream (play, G, suitable for very bright children, reviewed here)

TT: Almanac

August 30, 2007 by Terry Teachout

“Her teeth parted and a faint hissing noise came out of her mouth. She didn’t answer me. I went out to the kitchenette and got out some Scotch and fizzwater and mixed a couple of highballs. I didn’t have anything really exciting to drink, like nitroglycerin or distilled tiger’s breath.”
Raymond Chandler, The Big Sleep

TT: Way up north (II)

August 29, 2007 by Terry Teachout

• AUGUST 6 To Stonington, Maine, memorably portrayed by John Marin in two gorgeous watercolors hanging in Colby College’s Marin Collection. (Go here and click on the seventh image to get an impression of what this delightful coastal fishing town looks like.) Then via mail boat to Isle au Haut, seven miles off the Maine coast, which I last visited in 2003 in order to write the following Wall Street Journal column:

Six months ago, I bought a Fairfield Porter lithograph. Two weeks ago, I stood at the edge of a rocky cove near the southern tip of a remote island off the coast of Maine, looking at the same scene Porter viewed when he sketched “Isle au Haut.” To get there, I hiked for two sweaty hours along a narrow woodland trail, stepping over snakes and trying not to turn an ankle. What possessed a flabby, chair-bound critic like me to make such a journey? It seemed like a good idea as I sat in the air-conditioned comfort of my home office, but I started having second, third and fourth thoughts as I trudged up the Goat Trail of Isle au Haut.

Porter isn’t exactly a household name, but many connoisseurs consider him one of the greatest American artists (and art critics) of the 20th century, an astonishingly original representational painter whose style fuses two seemingly disparate idioms: the intimate domestic realism of Bonnard and Vuillard and the excitingly free brushwork of Willem de Kooning and other Abstract Expressionists. I knew I wanted to own something by Porter when I first started buying art, and I was lucky to find a good impression of this, the last lithograph he made before his death in 1975 at the age of 68. In it, a cove rimmed by pine-topped cliffs is loosely rendered in flat, irregularly shaped blotches of green, grey, tan and dusty pink. It is at once abstract and representational, a heightened vision of the craggy Maine landscapes Porter loved. When I heard that the Portland Museum of Art was showing a retrospective exhibition of his paintings, I got the idea of visiting the show, then looking for the actual cove portrayed in “Isle au Haut.”

This turned out to be rather more complicated than trying to find the well-known spots where Monet or Cézanne stood when painting their celebrated plein air landscapes. The isolated Isle au Haut is no resort. It consists mainly of rugged wilderness, though it is also home to 47 year-round residents who pronounce its name “eye-la-HOE.” The only place for visitors to stay is the tiny Keeper’s House Inn. Unfazed by the lack of electricity or telephones, I booked a room, and a few weeks later clambered aboard the mail boat from Stonington to Isle au Haut. Just two days before, I’d been walking through the Portland Museum, where I found a 1974 painting by Porter called “Cliffs of Isle au Haut,” the original version of my lithograph. The painting is three times larger and more brightly colored, but the composition is identical, and I felt sure it was a good omen.

Once I got to Isle au Haut, though, I realized I was in over my head. The 4,700-acre island was bigger than I’d thought (New York’s Central Park covers just 843 acres), and the shoreline contained a wealth of coves accessible only on foot. How to find the right one in the four days I’d allotted–if at all? I showed my kindly hosts a photo of “Isle au Haut” included in a book of Porter’s prints. They told me where it might be and swore I could find the spot without unreasonable difficulty. The next morning, I climbed into a battered SUV and rattled down a dirt road to the long hikers’ path known as the Goat Trail that was supposed to lead me there.

About the next two hours I will say nothing other than that I spent much of it cursing for having embarked so casually on so self-evidently impossible a task. Then I stumbled over a ridge, stepped between two trees and onto a huge flat rock, and knew at once that I was standing more or less where Porter had stood. The pines were taller, making the cliffs somewhat less imposing, and three decades’ worth of waves had gnawed at the shoreline. But the cool white light was the same, and so were the rocks, tan and green and–yes–pink, just as Porter had painted them. I pulled a disposable camera out of my backpack, composed a scene in the viewfinder that resembled “Isle au Haut” and took a snapshot.

As I staggered back down the Goat Trail, the baritone rumble of the offshore lobster boats ringing faintly in my ears, I remembered the remark by Porter that Justin Spring chose as the epigraph of “Fairfield Porter: A Life in Art.” “When I paint,” he wrote, “I think that what would satisfy me is to express what Bonnard said Renoir told him: make everything more beautiful.” Once I returned to New York and looked at “Isle au Haut” with new eyes, I understood at last the profound truth behind those deceptively simple words. Yes, Porter’s lithograph was realistic in the sense that it portrayed a real place recognizably–but the amazing freedom with which he transformed its contours into fields of color summed up the difference between life and art.

In the pocket of my jeans was a stone I’d found in the cove, its richly mottled surface reproducing with near-perfect fidelity the colors of “Cliffs of Isle au Haut.” Now it rests on my desk, a souvenir of the August morning when I beheld the beautiful reality embodied in that even more beautiful work of art.

The Keeper’s House Inn hasn’t changed a bit since 2003. It’s still far beyond the reach of cellphones and e-mail. The proprietors, Jeff and Judi Burke, still serve the tastiest meals imaginable. The lighthouse still beams its gentle reddish-orange glow through the windows of the candlelit third-floor garret bedroom. You can read all about it in the pages of Island Lighthouse Inn: A Chronicle, Jeff’s engagingly written story of life on Isle au Haut. Alas, you can’t stay there anymore, for Jeff and Judi are putting the Keeper’s House Inn up for sale, and they will no longer be taking guests after the end of this season. I’m glad I got to see them one more time.

• AUGUST 9 Back to Stonington via mail boat, and from there down the coast to Ogunquit, Maine, to see The King and I at Ogunquit Playhouse (about which more here) and eat as many of Flo’s Steamed Hot Dogs as I could stuff down my gullet. Order a jar of Flo’s relish by mail–you won’t be sorry.

Would that I could recommend the Ogunquit Museum of American Art with like fervor, but it was a disappointment, a small museum that prefers hosting second- and third-rate traveling exhibitions to hanging the treasures of its permanent collection. The view is fabulous, but otherwise my visit was a waste of time.

• AUGUST 10 To East Haddam, Connecticut, home of Goodspeed Musicals, which is currently performing High Button Shoes (about which more in Friday’s Wall Street Journal drama column). Housed in an 1876 opera house that overlooks the Connecticut River, Goodspeed Musicals is one of the most picturesque theaters in America, and it also has the near-overwhelming advantage of being just fifteen minutes away from the River Tavern, my favorite of all the restaurants at which I’ve dined in the course of my theater-related travels.

Instructions for maximum pleasure: (1) Don’t eat lunch. (2) Make a 5:30 reservation in order to dine at leisure and get to Goodspeed in plenty of time for an eight o’clock curtain. (3) Order the chocolate soufflé. (4) Spend the night at the Bishopsgate Inn, conveniently located a block from the theater. (5) Drive home the next day, secure in the knowledge that you’ve had a fabulous time.

(Second of two parts)

TT: Almanac

August 29, 2007 by Terry Teachout

“Every man who possibly can should force himself to a holiday of a full month in a year, whether he feels like taking it or not.”
William James, “Vacations”

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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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