
Two gay men struggle to the idea of becoming parents in The Kid, a new musical by Jack Lechner, Andy Monroe and Michael Zam based on Dan Savage's "The Kid: What Happened After My Boyfriend and I Decided to Go Get Pregnant." (No, the show has nothing to do with the famous Charlie Chaplin silent film that goes by the same name.) The production—probably the first musical ever to be inspired by the work of a sex columnist—will be presented by The New Group this spring, with Scott Elliott directing.
The parenting tables are turned in That Face, at Manhattan Theatre Club's Stage 1 beginning April 29. The New York premiere of British dramatist Polly Stenham's play is about a disturbed mother whose school-age children have to become parents to her. Elizabeth Marvel plays the mother and Sarah Benson, of SoHo Rep fame, will direct. Meanwhile, The Book of Grace, the latest play by Suzan-Lori Parks, looks at a young man who returns home to South Texas to confront his father, whom, we assume, he is not very happy with. Expect "rage, revenge, power and betrayal" in this James McDonald-directed play, beginning March 2 at the Public Theater. Sometimes real parents are not available to personally screw up their kid, so childless adults step in to do the heavy-lifting. Annie Baker's new play, The Aliens, is about two angry young men who decide to teach a lonely high school student "everything they know," which can't be much. And we all know what they say about a little knowledge. Sam Gold directs at Rattlestick Playwrights Theatre beginning April 15.
"Teach Your Children Well" is evidently not the favorite song of the small American town found in Adam Rapp's new play The Metal Children, premiering in late spring at The Vineyard Theatre. Directed by Rapp, the drama is about a New York writer who tries to defend one of his young adult novels which had been banned by the local school board.
When the Rain Stops Falling, a rare New York premiere of an Australian play, tracks the history of one family over 80s years. Chicagoan (now New Yorker?) David Cromer, who piloted the recent Our Town and Adding Machine, directs the piece by Andrew Bovall. The cast includes the redoubtable Victoria Clark, Mary Beth Hurt and Richard Topol. Previews begin at Lincoln Center Theater's Mitzi E. Newhouse on Feb. 11. Finally, the dysfunctional parenting drama of all time—Oedipus—is reinterpreted by playwright Craig Wright in a new production called Blind, at the Rattlestick starting Feb. 18. Lucie Tiberghien directs.
Time was, when we wanted to see a good play about bad parents, we turned to Sam Shepard. Well, Sam has a new play for us, all right, but it's not about family. It's about two friends. But, don't worry. They've got their grievances, too. Presented at Atlantic Theater Company and opening Jan. 27, Ages of the Moon stars Sean McGinley and Stephen Rea as two old friends who "sit, reflect, bicker, and put 50 years of love, friendship and rivalry to the test at the barrel of a gun."
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Ethan Hawke |
Mariana Elder, Chris Miller and Nathan Tysen set their new musical, The Burnt Part Boys, about a group of teenagers coming of age in West Virginia coal country, in 1962. The joint production of Playwrights Horizon and the Vineyard Theatre begins in May.
Top Secret: The Battle for the Pentagon Papers takes place—when else?—during Watergate, and takes an inside look at The Washington Post's decision to famously publish the classified study in question. Leroy Aarons and Geoffrey Cowan's play is presented at New York Theatre Workshop from Feb. 24 on. And playwright A.R. Gurney taps into his own personal history for The Grand Manner, about his experience going backstage to meet actress Katherine Cornell after a performance of Antony and Cleopatra. (Hey, if theatre people aren't going to remind us about long-forgotten, one-time theatre greats, who will?) That would have been in 1947, when she was 49 and he was 17. Mark Lamos directs at Lincoln Center Theater beginning May 27.
A couple works by actor-playwrights will be on display: Claudia Shear's Restoration at NYTW and Bruce Norris' Clybourne Park at Playwrights Horizons. The first, featuring Dirty Blonde creator Shear, is about Giulia Alfani, a once-rising star in the world of art restoration, who secures an interview with L'Accademia in Florence for the job of refreshing Michelangelo's David in preparation for its 500th birthday. The latter (which does not feature Norris) takes on the ever-present issue of urban gentrification.
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John Lithgow and Jennifer Ehle |