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278 stories by "Erik Haagensen"

The Pretty Trap by Erik Haagensen

Tennessee Williams' centenary is being used as the pretext for trotting out this "long-buried" piece, an early sketch for "The Glass Menagerie," but it seems more an act of exploitation th…

SOURCE: Backstage at 8:00am on August 3, 2011

NY Review: 'Julius Caesar' by Erik Haagensen

Director Lucy Bailey's full-volume approach to Shakespeare's tragedy tends to flatten it into melodrama, but one that hurtles forward with such speed that we're largely swept along with it.

SOURCE: Backstage at 5:21am on August 1, 2011

NY Review: 'The Winter's Tale' by Erik Haagensen

David Farr's meticulous direction of the outstanding RSC ensemble somehow marries the stark drama and playful comedy of this problematic work in a compelling production.

SOURCE: Backstage at 5:56am on July 25, 2011

The Patsy and Jonas by Erik Haagensen

In a virtuosic evening concerned with the creation of character, David Greenspan hilariously plays all the parts in a 1920s farce, then follows it with an intriguing monologue on his acting …

SOURCE: Backstage at 7:30am on July 24, 2011

NY Review: 'Death Takes a Holiday' by Erik Haagensen

A lack of dramatic action, underwritten characters, and an overwritten score combine to sink this musical fantasy from Broadway vets Maury Yeston, Thomas Meehan, and the late Peter Stone.

SOURCE: Backstage at 8:00am on July 21, 2011

Surviving Love by Erik Haagensen

Writer-performer Robert Chionis' sincere almost-one-man jukebox musical about a young gay boy from the sticks in NYC at the start of the AIDS epidemic is poorly scripted and awkwardly deli…

SOURCE: Backstage at 5:58am on July 21, 2011

Serve No Review Before It's Time by Erik Haagensen

"Gentlemen's agreement" is an archaic term that is nevertheless perfect for describing the unwritten contract between publications and theater producers known as the "review embargo."

SOURCE: Backstage at 1:38am on July 20, 2011

NY Review: 'A Strange and Separate People' by Erik Haagensen

Playwright Jon Marans' new play about the mixture of Orthodox Judaism and homosexuality exudes a tantalizing promise but has yet to marry its concerns with fully realized characters.

SOURCE: Backstage at 8:00am on July 19, 2011

The Austerity of Hope by Erik Haagensen

Dan Fingerman's adeptness at characterization and fine ear for contemporary speech sufficiently mitigate his naive plot and structure.

SOURCE: Backstage at 4:58am on July 19, 2011

NY Review: 'King Lear' by Erik Haagensen

The Royal Shakespeare Company is not offering the high-wire act of an Olivier but a thoroughly compelling ensemble rendition of this bleak tragedy in which the play's the thing.

SOURCE: Backstage at 5:39am on July 18, 2011

Julius by Design by Erik Haagensen

Kara Lee Corthron may be a promising playwright, but this ambitious two-and-a-half-hour work is too tonally erratic and in desperate need of a disciplined dramaturge.

SOURCE: Backstage at 5:48am on July 11, 2011

NY Review: 'Master Class' by Erik Haagensen

A hit in Washington D.C.'s 2010 Terrence McNally festival, this production arrives on Broadway in new and improved shape, with Tyne Daly delivering stage magic as opera diva Maria Callas.

SOURCE: Backstage at 8:00am on July 7, 2011

Blues for Mister Charlie by Erik Haagensen

This brand-new professional company is a bit ahead of itself attempting James Baldwin's complex 1964 drama about race in America, but it deserves points for the attempt.

SOURCE: Backstage at 6:14am on June 30, 2011

The Greenwich Village Follies by Erik Haagensen

Andrew Frank and Doug Silver's delightful musical salute to Greenwich Village's history and denizens is a refreshing breeze of a show—tuneful, literate, sassy, and sharp.

SOURCE: Backstage at 2:33am on June 29, 2011

NY Reviews: 'Unnatural Acts' by Erik Haagensen

The second powerful play in a year to tell the story of a horrifying 1920 purge of gay students at Harvard, the Plastic Theatre's communally written show is a triumph.

SOURCE: Backstage at 8:00am on June 23, 2011

Yes We Can by Erik Haagensen

When there's as much talent on display as there is in Daniella Shoshan's new play, it's dispiriting to have to report that the show comes across as one hot mess.

SOURCE: Backstage at 6:32am on June 23, 2011

NY Review: 'Sex Lives of Our Parents' by Erik Haagensen

It's clear that a refreshingly original sensibility is at work in Michael Mitnick's consistently inventive and surprising comedy-drama about love and commitment.

SOURCE: Backstage at 7:30am on June 22, 2011

NY Review: 'The Eyes of Babylon' by Erik Haagensen

Author-actor Jeff Key's intelligent, evocative, psychologically shrewd solo show about serving as a gay Marine in the Iraq war is one of the finest of its genre I have ever encountered.

SOURCE: Backstage at 7:15am on June 21, 2011

NY Review: '4000 Miles' by Erik Haagensen

Amy Herzog's new play is a companion piece to her captivating "After the Revolution," but it's more successful as character study than as a fully realized dramatic work.

SOURCE: Backstage at 8:00am on June 20, 2011

NY Review: 'The Spoon River Project' by Erik Haagensen

Director-adaptor Tom Andolora's inspired site-specific staging of Edgar Lee Masters' penetrating study of small-town American life makes up in atmosphere whatever it may lack in polish.

SOURCE: Backstage at 8:00am on June 17, 2011

The Emperor's New Codpiece by Erik Haagensen

Downtown drag queen Linda Simpson travels above 14th Street for the first time with her new comedy, which though ramshackle contains plenty of laughs and a memorable performance from Patri…

SOURCE: Backstage at 5:46am on June 13, 2011

NY Review: 'One Arm' by Erik Haagensen

Thoughtfully adapted and directed by Moisés Kaufman from an unproduced Tennessee Williams screenplay, this taut and fluid production unsettles with a quiet intensity.

SOURCE: Backstage at 7:48am on June 9, 2011

Cabaret Review: 'Barbara Cook: You Make Me Feel So Young' by Erik Haagensen

Barbara Cook, a superb actor who knows a thing or two about the human condition, shares her knowledge in this artfully understated, deeply affecting show.

SOURCE: Backstage at 5:45am on June 8, 2011

A Little Journey by Erik Haagensen

Director Jackson Gay's nurturing production of Rachel Crothers' 1918 drama flies by swimmingly for two acts but can't entirely overcome a sudden lurch into melodrama.

SOURCE: Backstage at 7:00am on June 6, 2011

NY Review: 'The Illusion' by Erik Haagensen

Tony Kushner's Corneille adaptation is a penetrating and poetic consideration of human desire told with a shimmering theatricality and a joy from start to finish.

SOURCE: Backstage at 7:00am on June 5, 2011
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