Brief Reviews: Wit, Warmth and Comedy on New York Stage
THEATER
Zero Hour
Zero Mostel’s ferocious talent, razor wit and volatility come to life
in this one-man show set in Mostel’s art studio during an imagined
interview. Writer-performer Jim Brochu’s impersonation is right on,
including the booming voice. Zero Hour combines humor, pathos and
backstage lore to explore the actor-activist’s stage and screen
successes, love of painting and righteous indignation: Mostel was
blacklisted in the 1950s, accused of being a member of the American
Communist Party. Directed by Piper Laurie. Through January 31 at
Theatre at St. Clement’s, New York (www.zerohourshow.com). —Barbara Trainin Blank
Circumcise Me
With his payes, beard and dangling tzitzis, the once-Catholic Yisrael Campbell is a sight to behold. The show’s title refers to his three
conversions, each necessitating a symbolic circumcision, as he went
from Reform to Conservative to Orthodox. With gentle but unstinting
humor he describes his journey, from an alcoholic and drug user once
married to an Egyptian Muslim, to making aliya and marrying his Talmud
teacher. The show leaves you wanting to befriend this funny, heimishe
guy who, no kidding, started his Jewish journey reading Leon Uris’s
Exodus. Through February 28 at the Bleecker Street Theatre in New York
(check to see if it is being extended; www.circumcisemetheplay.com ). —Zelda Shluker
Danny and Sylvia: The Danny Kaye Musical
Zany Jewish comic, brilliant nightclub and improv performer and
consummate actor—Danny Kaye was all of these, as this show
demonstrates. Robert McElwaine’s admiring if conventional book and
snappy score with composer Bob Bain also pay important tribute to wife
Sylvia Fine as accomplished composer, wife, manager and agent. Brian
Childers nails both the Catskill charmer and international star.
Through January 31 at St. Luke’s Theatre, Off-Broadway (check to see if
it is being extended; www.dannyandsylvia.com). —Jules Becker
EXHIBITS
The Rose at Brandeis: Works from the Collection
The latest exhibition at the Rose Art Museum at Brandeis University in
Waltham, Massachusetts, is a virtual Who’s Who of 20th-century art. On
view through May 23, the exhibit showcases approximately 120 pieces and
highlights the breadth of the trailblazing collection with works by
Marsden Hartley, Reginald Marsh, Milton Avery, Willem de Kooning, Helen
Frankenthaler, Jasper Johns, Roy Lichtenstein, Andy Warhol, Robert
Motherwell and Larry Rivers, Max Weber and Cindy Sherman, among others.
The
earliest works date back to the beginning of the 20th century, but the
show begins with a small 1934 oil painting, Reclining Nude, by Pablo
Picasso. The artist’s mistress had recently given birth to their child,
and he reimagined her portrait as a bowl of fruit. Beside it, the
curators have mounted a painting in browns and grays of a fruit bowl
overflowing with peaches, grapes and pears by another master of Cubism,
Georges Braque. By comparison, the Braque looks almost realistic.
“I
realized as we put this exhibit together that we had created a
hundred-years’ survey of Modernism and contemporary art,” said Roy
Dawes, director of museum operations. He and Adelarina Jedrzejczak are
the show’s cocurators. They arranged the exhibition in loosely
chronological order. Some groupings, like the Picasso and Braque, are
related by subject. Others are related by style—Modernism, Social
Realism, Surrealism, photography, video, Abstract Expressionism, Pop
and Minimalism.
It is a felicitous arrangement. Avoiding rigid
chronology permits the art to form more rational relationships. Even
familiar works look fresh when mounted in a new context. A round, black
Louise Nevelson sculpture hanging above the bold colors of a striped
Morris Louis painting seems organic, like an alien moon rising over a
landscape.
The museum’s mission statement affirms the Rose’s
commitment to freedom of expression, and its newest acquisition, STAVE,
which Jenny Holzer created in 2008, honors that intent. A controversial
artist, Holzer expresses political activism in her works. STAVE is an
electronic sculpture that uses texts taken from transcripts, obtained
through the Freedom of Information Act, of sworn testimony by detainees
and guards at Gitmo, the Naval facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Their
incriminating words in double-sided red, white and blue led messages
slide nonstop around the tall sculpture like an endless ribbon.
The
exhibition coincides with the publication of a long awaited catalog,
The Rose Art Museum at Brandeis (Abrams) that documents the major
cultural movements in contemporary art over the past five decades. The
Brandeis collection is especially strong in the art of the 1960s and
1970s.
It’s a bittersweet time for Rose Museum as it
approaches its 50th anniversary in 2011. It has amassed an
internationally acclaimed collection of approximately 8,000 modern and
contemporary works. Yet, its future is uncertain. Difficult economic
times have obliged the country’s only secular Jewish university to
consider selling parts of its collection and converting the museum
building into classrooms. Three members of the Board of Overseers have
brought suit to stop the sale and to keep the museum open.
While
that dispute sorts itself out, museum-goers can still partake of the
satisfying forshpeis that is “The Rose at Brandeis.” It is a taste of
the feast that the collection represents (781-736-2000; www.brandeis.edu ). —Shirley Moskow
48 Jews: What It Means to Be Jewish
These portraits by Israeli-born Abshalom Jac Lahav don’t show 48 Jews.
Or do they? Einstein, Freud and Anne Frank? Sure. Frida Kahlo, Sister
Edith Stein? Er…maybe. But Elvis Presley? Lahav is after different
quarry here. How do we represent a Jew when the subjects define their
own identity in individual ways or are defined by forces outside
themselves? Lahav, referencing a portrait series by Gerhard Richter and
Andy Warhol, uses different artistic styles in each colorful painting,
from Rembrandt to Bonnard, to raise provocative questions about Jews
and Jewishness in the diaspora. Through April 4 at the Jewish Museum of
Florida in Miami (www.jewishmuseum.com). —Stewart Kampel
FILM
Getting to Know a People Through Film: Two Festivals
By Judith Gelman Myers
It
is hard to keep up with the huge number of Jewish or Israeli-themed
works being screened at film festivals. While many will be shown at a
variety of venues around the country—and the fortunate ones will
eventually be released theatrically—others get limited exposure. This
is also true of films in niche film festivals. For instance, the third
Other Israel Film Festival in New York gives voice to the Arab citizens
of Israel, who constitute 20 percent of the country’s population. The
feature films, documentaries and discussions allow audiences to
encounter the everyday lives and human dimension that lie beyond the
news.
Then there is the Latinbeat Film Festival, sponsored by
The Film Society of Lincoln Center in New York, which, though not
specifically Jewish, put the spotlight on three Jewish-themed films
from emerging film industries in Mexico and Latin America. Taken
together, they create a portrait of a well-to-do Jewish Latin American
presence at peace with itself and its neighbors.
Zahara
Unfortunately, this loving tribute to his aunt made by dazzling
Palestinian actor Mohammad Bakri combines bad storytelling with fuzzy
intentions. Aunt Zahara tells lots of stories, but unless you already
know what she’s talking about, it’s impossible to figure out their
significance. Bakri’s voiceovers, though magnificently delivered, do
nothing to reduce the confusion. More unfortunate is Bakri’s melding of
a tribute and politic commentary. It is a diatribe against Israel in
the guise of a loving tribute, as if Bakri is using his aunt’s
suffering to score a point against the opposing team. Produced by
Carole Zabar and Bakri (info@otherisrael.org ).
Telling Strings
This magnificent documentary revea ls how a family of Palestinian
musicians living in the Galilee triumphs over isolation. Master
oudmaker Elias Jubran suffered personal isolation when his parents
rejected his passion and proclivity for music, which he studied
nevertheless until 1948, when an Israeli embargo allowed no Arabic
music or instruments into the new state. Finding themselves both
politically and culturally isolated, Jubran and his children have spent
their lives preserving their identity and their culture by devoting
themselves to Arabic music—from making traditional instruments to
transforming traditional forms with 21st-century musical conventions.
Balzli & Fahrer Productions, GmBH (www.swissfilms.ch).
Sayed Kashua—Forever Scared
Winner of the Prime Minister Prize for a Hebrew Author in 2005,
Palestinian Sayed Kashua unstintingly shares his fears, hopes and
neuroses in this topsy-turvy documentary. Brilliant, sensitive,
insightful and paranoid, he finds his existence as an Arab who loves
Israeli culture both wonderful and infuriating. Does his surreal life make
him neurotic? Or was he plunged into this love-hate relationship with
both himself and his country by congenital neurosis? Either way, Forever Scared will make you laugh...and drive you crazy. Heymann Brothers Films (www.heymann-films.com).
Camera Obscura
The odd setting for this film—the Entre Ríos colony, devised by Baron
Maurice de Hirsch to resettle Eastern European Jews as farmers in
Argentina (at the end of 1895, 64 percent of Argentina’s Jewish
population lived in Entre Rios province)—sets the stage for a
breathtakingly beautiful film about the power of looking within.
Award-winning director María Victoria Menis employs Buñuel-esque
sequences to tell the story of a child so homely even her Jewish mother
couldn’t bear to gaze on her, but whose future is remade by the machine
that gives the film its title: a camera obscura, a photographic device
that creates images by bringing light into a dark box and turning it
upside down, transforming the external into its own interior language.
It is a metaphor, but it is also what the film does: It brings the
outside in, transforms it and creates truth—and beauty and love—where
none existed before. Sophie Dulac Productions (National Center for
Jewish Film, www.jewishfilm.org).
Acne
This slow-moving but sweet coming-of-age film about a Jewish teen and
his dysfunctional family in Montevideo, Uruguay, gives us a glimpse of
what life is like for our wealthy coreligionists south of the border.
This film opens a tiny window onto one slice of life, with a pleasant
dose of gentle comedy about the pain of unrequited teen love. An
international coproduction from Uruguay, Argentina, Spain and Mexico.
Rezo Films (www.rezofilms.com).
Nora’s Will
Like the earlier My Mexican Shiva (2007), Nora’s Will
portrays a shiva gone awry in a Mexican-Jewish family. Full of humor
and tremendous poignancy, it shines with intelligent self-awareness and
compassionate insight. Written and directed by Marianna Chenillo.
Cacerola Films (www.imdb.com).
RECORDINGS
Jewish Baroque Music
This is a deftly performed, cleverly programmed and slightly
misleadingly titled set of Baroque chamber and vocal music from Italy’s
Ensemble Salmone Rossi. As the group’s name suggests, pride of place on
the recording goes to the works of the eponymous Rossi, a composer and
performer at the 16th to 17th-century court of Mantua. However, no
small part of the CD’s value comes from the inclusion of less
well-known composers like Avraham Caceres, who lived and wrote in
Amsterdam at the beginning of the 18th century, and Carlo Grossi,
another Mantuan. Perhaps the most interesting inclusions, though, are
excerpts from Handel’s oratorio “Esther” and several works by the
non-Jewish Austrian-Italian composer Cristiano Giuseppe Lidarti.
Lidarti composed several stirring settings of Hebrew texts that were
frequently performed in synagogues in the 18th century. The record’s
producer, Andrea Maria Panzuti, makes some particularly inspired
programming choices, juxtaposing Caceres’s version of “Hameshiach” with
Lidarti’s, and Handel’s “Esther” with Lidarti’s. Lidarti doesn’t suffer
in the comparison with his more famous colleague. And it is always good
to have more of Rossi, particularly a sprightly “Ein Keiloheinu” that
anticipates Louis Lewandowski’s version. Concerto (its Web site, http://concerto.musicmedia.it , is under construction). —George Robinson
Katchko: Three Generations of Cantorial Art
Cantor Deborah Katchko-Gray highlights her family’s cantorial legacy in
this compilation of 22 selections composed by her grandfather Adolph,
and transmitted by her father, Theodore. New and old blend in her
soprano renditions of pieces like “Hashkivenu” and “Acheinu Kol Beys
Yisroel” accompanied by guitar or string quartet, side by side with
archival recordings of her father and grandfather. Also notable are two
duets with her father. An accompanying book features essays and music
for 27 compositions (www.cantordebbie.com ). —R.M.
DVD
Rashevski’s Tango
When Rose, matriarch of the secular Jewish Belgian clan, dies, the
family no longer has her wisdom to guide them through existential
dilemmas. The lively, cranky characters grapple with issues of
betrayal, intermarriage, circumcision and burial. Though their choices
diverge—a grandson marries a Muslim, a granddaughter marries an
Orthodox convert—their lodestar remains Rose’s belief that the tango
makes all problems disappear. Sam Garbarski’s sympathetic film is
endearing. Menemsha Films (www.menemshafilms.com). —Susan Adler
Making Trouble: Three Generations of Funny Jewish Women
Three Jewish comics—Judy Gold, Jackie Hoffman and Corey Feldman—eat and
chat in a deli. Their conversation inevitably leads to great
trailblazing Jewish comedians Molly Picon, Fanny Brice, Sophie Tucker,
Joan Rivers, Gilda Radner, Wendy Wasserstein and Madelaine Kahn. Each
was sui generis, but all courageously broke gender barriers, opening
the door for the women who followed. Produced and directed by Rachel
Talbot (www.makingtrouble.com). —Z.S.
The People v. Leo Frank
Knowing about the violent end of Leo Frank, a New York Jew who
supervised a family pencil factory, makes for difficult viewing.
Reenactments and interviews replay the murder of a 13-year-old employee
and the ridiculous conduct of the trial—and the anti-Semitism that led
to Frank’s lynching. Directed by Ben Loeterman. BLPI Productions (www.leofrankfilm.com; 800-553-7752). —Z.S. |