LOCARNO FILM REVIEW: Babak Jalali’s ‘Frontier Blues’

frontier blues x650By Ray Bennett

LOCARNO, Switzerland – Intended to offer a droll portrait of eccentric characters living in the northern region of Iran next to the Turkmenistan border, Babak Jalali’s “Frontier Blues” will test the patience of audiences waiting for anything significant or even amusing to happen.

The film from Caspian Films is unlikely to attract much attention beyond a small element of the festival circuit.

The personalities and lives of the four characters whose lives on the barren steppes of the region are briefly explored might have seemed amusing on the written page but fail to come to life onscreen.

One spends much of his time in bed or wandering about with a tape player blaring Western pop tunes with his donkey. His uncle runs a clothing store with items that seldom fit his few customers. Another young man works at a chicken battery listening constantly to tapes that he hopes will teach him English.

The fourth character is an aging fellow who keeps a commercial photographer engaged with staged examples of the local culture while complaining all the while about his wife who ran off 30 years earlier. It all gets tiresome quite quickly.

Venue: Locarno International Film Festival; Cast: Mahmoud Kalteh, Abolfazl Karimi, Khajeh-Araz Dordi, Behzad Shahrivari, Karima Adebibe, Hossein Shams, George Hashemzadeh; Director,screenwriter: Babak Jalali.

This review appeared in The Hollywood Reporter.

 

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THEATRE REVIEW: Rachel Weisz in ‘A Streetcar Named Desire’

Streetcar 1 x650By Ray Bennett

LONDON – A knockout performance by Rachel Weisz as Blanche DuBois is the main reason to see “A Streetcar Named Desire,” running at London’s Donmar Warehouse through October 3. But the production has many other riches.

Tony-winning choreographer Rob Ashford turns director here and brings out all the poetry and drama of Tennessee Williams’ masterpiece set in sultry New Orleans just after World War II. Weisz has made herself alarmingly thin for the role of a woman whose vulnerability is as delicate as her needs are wanton and who is destroyed by a force that she can neither understand nor control.

Elliot Cowan is suitably muscular, loud and threatening as Stanley Kowalski, the husband of Blanche’s lovestruck sister, Stella, played well by Ruth Wilson (TV’s “Jane Eyre”), and Barnaby Kay makes her suitor Mitch appropriately stolid. From Blanche’s arrival at her sister’s dingy two-room apartment, rendered evocatively by set designer Christopher Oram using wrought iron and a spiral staircase, it’s apparent that this dreamy lost waif will clash with her violently territorial and crude brother-in-law.

Weisz is exactly the right age for Blanche, and though she can do nothing to make her radiant features appear faded, she conveys acutely the woman’s sense of loss and desperate need for emotional nourishment. She increasingly is delusional, but her love of artifice and style is apparent, and it is clear why she is catnip to certain men.

Ashford brings in characters from Blanche’s life to underline the grip the past has on her fragile imagination and cleverly uses the same actor (Jack Ashton) to play the delivery boy she toys with and her late husband in dream sequences. Blanche’s sorrow is the result of seeing the boy she married blow his brains out after she caught him in the intimate embrace of an older man. With her home gone and her teaching career in tatters, she arrives to sponge from her sister with lies about her past and future, only to run into the immovable Stanley.

Weisz brilliantly succeeds in a role that was originated by Jessica Tandy on Broadway in 1947 and played in 1949 in the West End by Vivien Leigh, who went on to win her second Oscar for the Elia Kazan movie version opposite Marlon Brando.

Brando’s shadow looms over any production of Williams’ masterpiece, making life difficult for the actor playing Kowalski, and so it is for Cowan. He gets the strutting-thug part of Kowalksi right but misses the vulnerability and insolence and doesn’t really succeed in showing why Stella loves him, nor why he finds Blanche such a threat.

It’s a stalwart performance, though, in a terrific production, and Weisz makes it unforgettable.

Venue: Donmar Warehouse, runs through Oct. 3; Cast: Rachel Weisz, Elliot Cowan, Ruth Wilson, Barnaby Kay; Playwright: Tennessee Williams; Director: Rob Ashford; Set designer: Christopher Oram; Lighting designer: Neil Austin; Music/sound designer: Adam Cork.

This review appeared in The Hollywood Reporter.

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‘McCabe & Mrs. Miller’ villain Hugh Millais dies at 79

millais x650By Ray Bennett

LONDON – Hugh Millais, who utters the fateful line that changes everything for John McCabe in my all-time favorite movie, Robert Altman’s “McCabe & Mrs. Miller” (1971), has died aged 79.

As the menacing Butler, who comes to the town of Presbyterian Church “to hunt bear” with two gunslinger sidekicks, he toys with McCabe (Warren Beatty), who has turned down an offer for his business.

Impressed by the men’s ruthlessness, McCabe is now willing to make a deal. Butler listens to McCabe and says, as if insulted, “I don’t make deals.”

Millais, who starred with Susannah York in Altman’s “Images (1972) and with Christopher Walken and Tom Berenger in John Irvin’s “The Dogs of War” (1980), had a life bigger than the movies, as his obituary in The Times makes clear:

“Hugh Millais led a varied life as a film actor, yachtsman, calypso singer, oil-man, design consultant and cook. He spent much of his life travelling, and landed himself in more than one mini-revolution.

“He was a noted raconteur who loved nothing more than to place his mighty frame — he stood 6ft 6in tall — on a high bar stool, pick up a guitar and sing. He was reckoned to drink a bottle of rosé every day of his later life.”

Here’s The Independent’s obituary for Hugh Millais

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In praise of Coffee Crisp, the great Canadian candy bar

Coffee Crisp x600
The best candy bar in the world is (tragically) very hard to find in the U.K.

Whenever I am in Canada, the one thing I always make sure to bring back to the U.K. is a bunch of candy bars called Coffee Crisp, which is not available here. It’s no surprise that I am not alone in this.

The brilliant humorist Bruce McCall, brother of my long-ago Windsor Star colleague Walt McCall, is one of several Canadian ex-patriots asked by the New York Times to describe what they miss most about their homeland. With typical wit, McCall gets it exactly right. This is how his piece begins:

The gourmets say there isn’t a native Canadian food worth remembering after you’ve left the country. The gourmets have never bitten into a Coffee Crisp.

A Coffee Crisp tastes like Canada to anybody who grew up gnawing on that confection, a memorably crisp blend of coffee cream, cookie wafers and milk chocolate as wholesome and satisfying as the Canadian national anthem.

It was a square-edged rectangle, like a brick, wrapped in a yellow-going-to-gold paper that seemed to elevate its value above all rival confections. It was unlike other chocolate bars.

McCall’s comments are quite a way down in the story in The New York Times

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THEATRE REVIEW: Ronald Harwood’s ‘Taking Sides’, ‘Collaboration’

taking sidesBy Ray Bennett

LONDON – British playwright Ronald Harwood’s 1995 play “Taking Sides” and his latest, “Collaboration,” presented in tandem at the Duchess Theatre in London’s West End, each deal with people trapped in the quagmire of Nazi Germany and challenge viewers to wonder, “What would you have done?”

Both productions are directed with great skill by Philip Franks and star the same accomplished players as Michael Pennington and David Horovitch  portray excellently very different antagonists from one play to the next.

The plays can be viewed separately but seeing the productions as a double bill reinforces Harwood’s trenchant examination of one the tragedies of that time and the predicament into which artists in particular were thrust.

“Taking Sides” takes place during the post-World War II de-Nazification when German citizens were investigated regarding their compromises and affiliations during Hitler’s regime. An abrasive U.S. officer, Major Arnold (Horovitch) is grilling famous conductor Dr. Wilhelm Furtwangler (Pennington) about his time as leader of the Berlin Philharmonic during the Third Reich.

Pennington conveys the conductor’s anguish and crumpled dignity while Horovitch helps Harwood heighten the dilemma by making the interrogator vulgar and unlikable.

“Collaboration” deals with composer Richard Strauss (Pennington) and his reaction to being told by Hitler’s thugs that he can no longer work with his great librettist, Stefan Zweig (Horovitch) because he is Jewish.

The two leading actors almost change shape as well as character and the play is enriched by fine contributions from Isla Blair as Strauss’ formidable wife and Martin Hutson as a Nazi officer.

Harwood, who won the Academy Award for writing “The Piano” in 2002 and the BAFTA for “The Diving Bell and the Butterfly” in 2007, blends his gift for imagery with fine stagecraft.

“Taking Sides” and “Collaboration” offer no solutions to the moral dilemmas examined, they do impart considerable wisdom.

Venue: Duchess Theatre, runs through Aug. 29; Cast: Michael Pennington, David Horovitch, Sophie Roberts, Martin Hutson, Pip Donaghy, Isla Blair, Melanie Jessop; Playwright: Ronald Harwood; Director: Philip Franks; Set designer: Simon Higlett; Lighting designer: Mark Jonathan; Sound designer: John Leonard.

This review appeared in The Hollywood Reporter.

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Magic and mischief in Ron Base’s novel, ‘The Strange’

By Ray Bennett

LONDON – Few writers know Hollywood better than my Canadian friend Ron Base. As a reporter, film critic, magazine writer, screenwriter and novelist, he has explored the magic of the movies in many ways.

the strange x325But Toronto-based Base knows his history too and his new novel, “The Strange”, published by West End Books, combines the mystery and marvel of grand cinematic adventures with a taste for the glamour and mystique of 19th century Vienna, London and most especially Paris.

Like the best storytellers, Base in “The Strange” leads you to somewhere you thought you knew, in this case Paris, and reveals it to be even more magical and enchanting than you could possibly have imagined.

It’s a tale of cunning and deception with intrigue, high adventure and vivid characters including a future King of England and the man who built the Eiffel Tower with a plot as tasty and satisfying as dinner at the Ritz.

His tale is of a 14-year-old Parisian orphan named Ned who has the strange gift of kinetic powers. Lost and alone, he becomes ensnared in the machinations of a fascinating woman named Mrs. Nevermore, who has mysterious powers of her own along with a penchant for larceny on a big scale.

Base takes time to draw a colourful ensemble of weird and wonderful characters as he slowly reveals a gambit by Mrs. Nevermore that involves an attempt to sell the Eiffel Tower to England’s Prince of Wales. There is much mischief and mayhem along the way leading to an explosive and highly entertaining climax.

As he showed in his splendid Hollywood novel “Magic Man,” Base has the considerable gift of writing about magical things with a childlike sense of wonder. It’s a great relief from the forced hardboiled approach of many popular authors and makes “The Strange,” as intelligent and eldritch as it is, an appealing read for all ages.

There are two book launches at which Base will sign copies of his novel, first tonight at P. J. O’Brien’s Irish Pub in downtown Toronto and on Sunday at 133 Mill Street in Milton, Ontario.

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TV REVIEW: James Nesbitt in BBC Iraq drama, ‘Occupation’

 

OccupationBy Ray Bennett

LONDON – James Nesbitt has come a long way since he first attracted notice in ITV’s “Cold Feet” in 1987 and he shows that he’s become a fine actor in “Occupation”, a three-part drama about British soldiers in Iraq that runs on three consecutive nights on BBC1 starting tonight at 9 o’clock.

Produced by Kudos (“Spooks,” “Life On Mars”), written by Peter Bowker (“Blackbool”) and directed by Nick Murphy (“Heroes and Villains,” “Primeval”), it’s the tale of three men whose terrible experience in an incident in Basra in 2003 marks them each in separate ways.

Stephen Graham (“Snatch” and soon to appear as Baby Face Nelson with Johnny Depp as Dillinger in Michael Mann’s “Public Enemies”), Warren Brown (“Grownups”) and Nesbitt (“Jekyll,” “Murphy’s Law”) play the soldiers.

The first episode was screened at BAFTA a week or so ago and it was both atmospheric and involving. It’s a change of pace for Nesbitt but he plays the role of a seasoned military man with great assurance.

Nesbitt says, “This is the first soldier I’ve played since I was starting out as a young extra aged 16 or 17, and it was quite daunting. I said to the director early on: ‘I am worried about being believable’. I just couldn’t picture myself. I kept telling him to keep an eye on my military bearing and my authority.”

Nesbitt marched against the UK’s decision to join in the invasion of Iraq and he says he hasn’t changed his mind about that although his attitude towards the men and women who served has been altered by his experience making “Occupation.”

He says, “What has been extraordinary to me and all those involved in ‘Occupation,’ irrespective of our own political persuasions or ideologies, is that we have come away from it with an enormous amount of respect for what they do. The discipline and the commitment of these men doing this job are quite extraordinary and quite moving.”

Screenwriter Bowker did research with an organisation called Combat Stress, which helps veterans deal with the psychological damage of seeing action. Many have serious difficulty settling back into society, suffer mental and psychological problems and turn to drugs.

Booker says, “The thing that I was always reaching for was the emotional and psychological effect of warfare on young men who under any other circumstances might be written off by society and wouldn’t go near admitting they have a mental illness or psychological damage.”

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FILM REVIEW: ‘Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen’

transformers x650By Ray Bennett

LONDON — Designed to give devoted fans of the 2007 “Transformers,” which grossed more than $700 million worldwide, more of the same, Michael Bay’s sequel “Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen” is a nonstop whirl of flying, battling and crashing machinery.

Characters and comedy are in short supply in a plot that’s basically an Indiana Jones-style search for a buried treasure, in this case a 1,000-year-old matrix that will give life back to Optimus Prime, one of the alien robots who is on the side of humans in their fight against the evil Decepticons who are out to destroy them.

With Shia LaBeouf and Megan Fox (picture below) back as the leads and massive battles involving ships, planes, tanks, rockets and industrial level shape-changing machines, the film will make another huge dent in the global boxoffice.

With its intelligence at the level of the simple-minded, however, the film is not likely to attract moviegoers who seek something more than a screen filled with kaleidoscopes of colored metal. Fan boys will no doubt love it, but for the uninitiated it’s loud, tedious and, at 147 minutes, way too long.

transformers 2 x650LaBeouf’s nerdy character Sam is off to college in this one. He barely has time to meet his new roommates before the war games begin. Fox’s hot-chick car mechanic Mikaela has come to visit, and the two are soon off on the international hunt for the missing matrix.

Sam’s nitwit parents (Kevin Dunn, Julie White) are on holiday in Europe. They also get involved along with college fellow Leo (Ramon Rodriguez) and eventually Simmons (John Turturro), a former agent who now works at his mother’s butcher shop. Rainn Wilson is wasted in one scene as a snarky professor.

Tyrese Gibson and Josh Duhamel return as stalwart soldiers, and there’s the expected army of cars, trucks, assorted vehicles and mechanical implements that can become nasty metallic beasts in a flash. The long climax takes place in the Egyptian desert with ancient secrets to be found inside the pyramids with explosions going off all around.

Bay’s team of four editors stitch together smashing but meaningless images, though it’s as difficult to make out which machine is which as it is to tell what anyone is saying. The noise level -– not helped by Steve Jablonsky’s relentless score – is super-intense and everyone yells lines at high speed. Because nothing they’re saying makes any sense, it’s hardly important.

LaBeouf gets little chance to show what charm he might have. Meanwhile, Fox has little to do except look great in a tank top and tight jeans while running in slow motion through flying sand.

Opens: UK: June 19 / US: June 24 (Paramount); Cast: Shia LaBeouf, Megan Fox, Josh Duhamel, Tyrese Gibson, John Turturro, Rainn Wilson, Jon Voight; Director: Michael Bay; Screenwriters: Alex Kurtzman, Ehren Kruger, Roberto Orci; Director of photography: Ben Seresin; Production designer: Nigel Phelps; Music: Steve Jablonsky; Costume designer: Deborah L. Scott; Editor: Roger Barton; Producers: Tom De Santo, Lorenzo di Bonaventura, Don Murphy, Ian Bryce; Executive Producers: Steven Spielberg, Michael Bay, Brian Goldner, Mark Vahradian; Presented by DreamWorks Pictures, Paramount Pictures in association with Hasbro, Di Bonaventura Pictures. Rated PG13; running time, 150 minutes.

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THEATRE REVIEW: Helen Mirren in ‘Phaedre’

phedre x650By Ray Bennett

LONDON – The National Theatre’s production of Jean Racine’s tragedy “Phaedre,” in a version by British poet Ted Hughes, is so full of “woe is me” lamentations that when John Shrapnel as Theramene begins his round-the-houses description of heroic Hippolytus’ death at sea, you want to ask, “Is this a long story?”

Sadly, it is. Shrapnel does a good job – he roars and he pants – but Hughes crams so much information into the speech with deadening phrases empty of poetry that the torrent of words loses meaning and sounds more like waves crashing on the shore.

But you don’t want to know about that. You want to hear about Helen Mirren, who stars as Phedre and is making her first stage appearance in six years, during which time she won an Oscar for “The Queen.” Unfortunately, she is ill-served by the text and Nicholas Hytner’s direction, and she doesn’t come to grips with the subtler elements of her obsession with stepson Hippolytus, played handsomely by Dominic Cooper (“The History Boys”).

On Bob Crowley’s simmering set, a rocky terrace that looks out to sun and sand, it’s a classic Greek tragedy in which Phedre’s warrior husband, Theseus, the King of Athens, is reported dead, and the queen’s grief gives way to lust for her uninterested stepson.

The problem is that the lust and the flights of fancy that usually result from it are never conveyed. Phedre makes her entrance wrapped in a widow’s shroud with her guilt already on high beam. There’s little to suggest an older woman feeling young and flirty as a result of her passion. When she reveals her longing to the young man, it’s as off-putting as it would be watching a gruesome older man groping a teenager. No wonder Hippolytus is repulsed.

Of course, he’s already smitten with the lithe and spirited Aricia (Ruth Negga), so it’s a no go anyway. But whereas the deluded Phedre might take that as betrayal, here she’s just mildly annoyed until her unctuous servant Oenone (Margaret Tyzack) proposes a sinister solution.

Machinations ensue over who shall inherit the crown, but there are further complications when Theseus (Stanley Townsend) turns out not to be dead and returns to find his palace in an uproar. The rest of the cast does its best, but the drama plays out monotonously lacking sexual tension or much sense of real danger and significance.

Venue: National Theatre, runs through Aug. 27; Cast: Helen Mirren, Dominic Cooper, Margaret Tyzack, John Shrapnel, Ruth Negga, Stanley Townsend; Playwright: Jean Racine, in a version by Ted Hughes; Director: Nicholas Hytner; Set designer: Bob Crowley; Lighting designer: Paule Constable; Music: Adam Cork.

This review appeared in The Hollywood Reporter. Photo: Catherine Ashmore

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THEATRE REVIEW: ‘The Cherry Orchard’ and ‘The Winter’s Tale’

Cherry Orchard, The Brooklyn Academy of Music - Harvey Theater BAM, The Old Vic and Neal Street Productions partner to present Tom Stoppard's new version of Chekhov's play with a cast of American and British actors. Show Dates: Performances from 02 Jan 2009 Closing 08 Mar 2009 Synopsis: The old order collides with the new as a charming but impractical aristocratic family refuses to face economic reality. This bittersweet tragi-comedy examines the end of the feudal era in Russia and the great changes that would eventually result in Revolution. Show Advisory: None Genre: Comedy/Drama Cast List: Simon Russell Beale Michael Braun Selina Cadell Morven Christie Sinéad Cusack Richard Easton Rebecca Hall Josh Hamilton Ethan Hawke Paul Jesson Dakin Matthews Charlotte Parry Gary Powell Tobias Segal Jessica Pollert Smith Production Credits: Sam Mendes (Director) Anthony Ward (Scenic Design) Catherine Zuber (Costume Design) Paul Pyant (Lighting Design) Other Credits: Written by: Anton Chekhov

By Ray Bennett

LONDON – Simon Russell Beale leads a splendid British and American cast in William Shakespeare’s “The Winter’s Tale” and Anton Chekhov’s “The Cherry Orchard” as the Bridge Project – which began at the Brooklyn Academy of Music – arrives at the Old Vic.

The two plays, which audiences may see in one afternoon and evening on certain Wednesdays and Saturdays, make up nearly six hours of theater at its best, though ‘Winter’s Tale” is more satisfying and probably best seen second.

Oscar-winning director Sam Mendes, who was artistic director at London’s Donmar Warehouse for a decade before turning to films, has assembled a top-rate cast that includes Ethan Hawke, Josh Hamilton, Tobias Segal and Dakin Matthews from the U.S.; Richard Easton from Canada; Rebecca Hall (pictured with Beale in “The Winter’s Tale” below), Paul Jesson and Morven Christie from the U.K.; and Sinead Cusack (pictured with Beale in “The Winter’s Tale” above) from Ireland.

Winter's Tale, The Brooklyn Academy of Music - Harvey Theater BAM, The Old Vic and Neal Street Productions' Bridge Project presents Shakespeare's classic. Show Dates: Performances from 10 Feb 2009 Closing 07 Mar 2009 Performance Schedule: Tuesday - Saturday, 7:30PM Sunday, 3PM February 24-27, no performances: the same company performs Chekhov's The Cherry Orchard. Tuesday February 17, 8PM (BAM Gala) Saturday February 28, 7:30PM Sunday March 1, 2PM Saturday March 7, 2PM Sunday March 8, 7:30PM Tickets: 718.636.4100 x1 Pricing: $30 - $90 Box Office: 718-636-4100 Show Run Time: Two hours, 30 minutes, with one intermission Theatre Information: Brooklyn Academy of Music - Harvey Theater 651 Fulton Street (between Ashland Place and Rockwell Place) Brooklyn, NY 11217 US Synopsis: Mythic and moving story of a king’s irrational jealous rage and its consequences. The Winter’s Tale sweeps breathtakingly from tragedy to comedy as it moves from the winter of estrangement and bitter loss to the summer of reconciliation and renewal. Show Advisory: None Genre: Drama Cast List: Simon Russell Beale Michael Braun Selina Cadell Morven Christie Sinéad Cusack Richard Easton Rebecca Hall Josh Hamilton Ethan Hawke Paul Jesson Dakin Matthews Charlotte Parry Gary Powell Tobias Segal Jessica Pollert Smith Production Credits: Sam Mendes (Director) Anthony Ward (Scenic Design) Catherine Zuber (Costume Design) Paul Pyant (Lighting Design) Other Credits: Written by: William ShakespeareIn “Tale,” Mendes casts the North Americans as the Bohemians, leaving the Sicilians to those from the British Isles, which means the difference in accents is worked to advantage. But it’s not distracting either in the more sober “Cherry Orchard,” most notably in Hawke’s restrained performance as perpetual student Trofimov compared to his flamboyant troubadour thief Autolycus in the former production.

Both plays deal with aspects of change and loss, particularly of children, and Mendes illuminates those themes, drawing fine performances while employing only props and Paul Pyant’s clever lighting to stage many striking images.

Beale reinforces his claim to being the finest stage actor in Britain with a wrenching performance as the mistakenly and vindictively jealous king, Leontes, in “Tale.” The statuesque and graceful Hall gives his faithful but condemned wife Hermione grit and determination to match her radiance, and the pair’s tragedy is immensely moving.

The play changes mood abruptly just before the intermission, and the second act moves from the sad and bitter Sicilian court to 16 years later in Bohemia. Mendes takes a risk in going for a sort of “Hee-Haw” approach to Bohemian life, and apart from a bawdy balloon dance it works. Hawke (pictured above left) gives a standout performance with a nod to Nicholson and Dylan and helps considerably to make these scenes successful.

“Orchard” boasts a witty adaptation by Tom Stoppard based on a literal translation by Helen Rappaport, but the play suffers from the simple fact that the family of fading aristocrats who are about to lose their neglected property fail to win much sympathy.

Cusack, who makes the stepmother in “Tale” strong and sympathetic, plays the colorful but self-indulgent Ranevskaya with great flair and insight. But the fate of her ignored daughter, Vanya, played delicately by Hall, and the conflicted ambitions of serf-turned-entrepreneur Lopakhin, played wonderfully by Beale, is far more significant than what happens to a bunch of inconsiderate and self-pitying wastrels.

Winter's Tale, The Brooklyn Academy of Music - Harvey Theater BAM, The Old Vic and Neal Street Productions' Bridge Project presents Shakespeare's classic. Show Dates: Performances from 10 Feb 2009 Closing 07 Mar 2009 Performance Schedule: Tuesday - Saturday, 7:30PM Sunday, 3PM February 24-27, no performances: the same company performs Chekhov's The Cherry Orchard. Tuesday February 17, 8PM (BAM Gala) Saturday February 28, 7:30PM Sunday March 1, 2PM Saturday March 7, 2PM Sunday March 8, 7:30PM Tickets: 718.636.4100 x1 Pricing: $30 - $90 Box Office: 718-636-4100 Show Run Time: Two hours, 30 minutes, with one intermission Theatre Information: Brooklyn Academy of Music - Harvey Theater 651 Fulton Street (between Ashland Place and Rockwell Place) Brooklyn, NY 11217 US Synopsis: Mythic and moving story of a king’s irrational jealous rage and its consequences. The Winter’s Tale sweeps breathtakingly from tragedy to comedy as it moves from the winter of estrangement and bitter loss to the summer of reconciliation and renewal. Show Advisory: None Genre: Drama Cast List: Simon Russell Beale Michael Braun Selina Cadell Morven Christie Sinéad Cusack Richard Easton Rebecca Hall Josh Hamilton Ethan Hawke Paul Jesson Dakin Matthews Charlotte Parry Gary Powell Tobias Segal Jessica Pollert Smith Production Credits: Sam Mendes (Director) Anthony Ward (Scenic Design) Catherine Zuber (Costume Design) Paul Pyant (Lighting Design) Other Credits: Written by: William Shakespeare

Venue: The Old Vic, runs through Aug. 15; Cast: Simon Russell Beale, Sinead Cusack, Ethan Hawke, Rebecca Hall; Playwrights: William Shakespeare; Anton Chekhov, in a new version by Tom Stoppard; Director: Sam Mendes; Set designer: Anthony Ward; Costume designer: Catherine Zuber; Lighting designer: Paul Plyant; Sound designer: Paul Arditti; Music: Mark Bennett; Producers: The Old Vic, Brooklyn Academy of Music, Neal Street Prods.

This review appeared in The Hollywood Reporter.

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