Wayne Hoffman

Carol Kane's talents are trapped in a play about Bette Davis that's like 'Dolores Claiborne' on barbiturates:

Kane avoids most (though not all) of the shopworn external gestures that so often define Davis impersonators—the over-punctuated speech, the wild gestures with cigarette in hand, the wide and crazy eyes—and instead finds a more internal point of connection to the late star. Her goal, it seems, isn’t to doBette Davis, but to be Bette Davis. It’s a shame that the play—billed as a comic thriller despite being neither funny nor thrilling—isn’t a better showcase for her talents.

Bio: Wayne Hoffman is deputy editor of Nextbook Press. He is also managing director for special projects at Tablet Magazine. His novel, Hard, about a randy theater critic in Manhattan, was only partially autobiographical; his new novel, Sweet Like Sugar, is less autobiographical and, therefore, less randy.

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In his playwriting debut, 'Social Network' star Jesse Eisenberg turns out a bad bromance

His nomination for an Oscar for his role in The Social Network is his presumptive qualification for writing and starring as Edgar in Asuncion at the Cherry Lane Theatre. He tries to play the doormat role with the nervous self-deprecation of a young Woody Allen, but Edgar still seems more pathetic than endearing.

And he is playing against Justin Bartha (The Hangover), who is mostly just a prick as Vinny, although he does get most of the evening’s best lines, which he delivers with appropriate snarkiness. More

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on October 28th, 2011 11:16am

 
Article

At the Public, an anti-hagiography of Steve Jobs, reported from a Shenzhen factory floor

Daisey talks to workers at the Apple factory, some as young as 12, about the working conditions, and he relates to the audience their harrowing stories about crushed hands, armed guards, and blacklists for anyone who complains. The factory owners, he learns, aren’t unresponsive: When a string of workers jumps off the roof to their deaths, the owners place nets around the upper floors to catch the bodies. When the media finally report on the pitiful salaries, the owners boost workers’ pay—only to take back every additional cent by charging rent for the coffin-sized, stacked beds in the group dorms. More

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on October 18th, 2011 10:39am

 
Article

Some good performances, but 'The Bus' never quite makes it out of the station

In the small town where The Bus, a new play by James Lantz playing at 59E59 Theaters, is set, anyone who isn’t a member of the local megachurch is an outcast. This town hasn't even made it to tackling issues as serious as the dancing and rock music that riled up fictional Bomont of Footloose fame. More

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on October 10th, 2011 9:49am

 
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Life after 'Priscilla': Dina Martina, Joey Arias return to drag's edgy, naughty roots

Two limited-run shows skip the Abba and disco singalongs to tap the genre's grittier, raunchier and more sexually adventurous roots. The performers couldn’t be more different, but they both embody the joyful and incendiary spirit of drag that sometimes seems to have been doused for eternity in big wet choruses of "I Love the Nightlife." More

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on September 26th, 2011 11:05am

 
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The love experiment: 'Completeness' brings science and romance to the stage

There’s a lot of science in Itamar Moses’s play. It’s all explained well enough, but sometimes it feels like sitting through an A.P. class. What keeps it from getting too cerebral is the emotional and very human rhythm of the romance, sometimes synchronous, sometimes adversarial. More

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on September 14th, 2011 9:53am

 
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Fall Preview: To find something interesting in a dull-looking season, follow Linda Lavin

This fall on Broadway, it seems everything new is old, again.

Even the fact that another season is getting underway in which revivals and reinterpretations seem to rule feels like a story we've told before.

Some revivals are at least bringing back something we haven't seen in a long time. Godspell has been the stuff of high-school musical-theater productions for three decades now, and finally is back on Broadway; On a Clear Day You Can See Forever is being staged for the first time since 1966—with a new book, and starring Harry Connick Jr. More

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on September 6th, 2011 6:51am

 
Article

In two one-man shows at the Fringe, comic relief from struggles familiar and unfamiliar

You’ve probably never met anyone with a story like Aaron Berg’s, but (especially if you’re a gay New Yorker) you’ve probably met lots of people with a story like Dan Horrigan’s. More

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on August 22nd, 2011 1:30pm

 
Article

'Rent' goes up again off-Broadway, this time as a period piece

In 1996 the landmark rock musical about AIDS was remarkable for how well it reflected downtown life at the time. (Hold the snark about how much grittier it really was downtown. We’re talking about Broadway, where a stage adaptation of Big mounted the same season and was considered risky, and the other big offerings were revivals of Hello Dolly! and The King and I.)

In its new incarnation, Rent remains largely unchanged in its content, although like everything these days it's been downsized to a 500-seat off-Broadway theater. But its tale of youthful alienation and artists struggling to survive in a brutal era filled with drugs and disease seems like a time capsule from a long-forgotten age. More

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on August 12th, 2011 1:35pm

 
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Another play about Harvard's secret 1920 gay purge succeeds where the last failed, and fails where it succeeded

To preserve its own reputation even as it destroyed so many others', Harvard University sealed records of hearings the school held in 1920 to investigate, expose and expel a network of gay students. In 2002, a student reporter unearthed them. Classic Stage Company brings this story to light in Unnatural Acts, conceived and directed by Tony Speciale. More

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on June 23rd, 2011 3:05pm

 
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A gay marine's one-man show eschews the tired narrative; the problem is, it's his best stuff

Key’s true tales from the front aren’t as harrowing, wrenching, or politically charged as, say, the fictitious ones seen this season in Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo. But they are his, and they are presented with a lyricism that is enlightening.

And then there's that other thing: The gay thing. More

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on June 22nd, 2011 3:11pm