Lear

Young Jean Lee's Theater Company at Soho Rep

Reviewed by Mitch Montgomery

January 14, 2010


Photo by Blaine Davis
For playwright-director Young Jean Lee, Shakespeare's "King Lear" obviously isn't the intimidating canonical pillar that it might be to others. In her own "Lear," Lee fearlessly pillages the Bard's sacred text, borrowing only the characters Goneril, Regan, Cordelia, Edgar, and Edmund and winding them into a punchy, kaleidoscopic narrative about ailing parents and the adult children who abandon them. In most cases, Lee's assertive absurdity reaches its usual sublimity, but, unfortunately, it sometimes leaves one as baffled as a bitter fool.

Lee's thesislike project begins with the quick excision of Lear and Gloucester, the two aging parents, from the original narrative. Her "Lear" picks up approximately where the mad old king and his friend have been put out into a storm by their unsympathetic children. A new story, about Lear's famous daughters (played by April Matthis, Okwui Okpokwasili, and Amelia Workman), Gloucester's two boys (Paul Lazar and Pete Simpson), and their collective guilt, veers off into near abstraction. Suffice it to say that by the end of the evening, Simpson, the sharp actor portraying the nihilistic Edmund, also ends up playing Big Bird from "Sesame Street."

Lee's able staging presents these detached children within the opulent confines of David Evans Morris and Roxana Ramseur's traditional Elizabethan scenic and costume design. Content to submerge themselves in the excellent fopperies of their lives (who looks fat, who looks old, who's not feminine enough anymore—any signs of age or decline that might one day get them thrown out into the storm), they come across with hilarious catty nastiness. But soon Lee's Shakespearean proxies dissolve, as though she has tired of the exercise, leaving the actors to play themselves in direct address to the audience. Though the cast members acquit themselves with sincerity in this transition, it proves too jarring a maneuver even for Lee, and the overall weight of her material feels diminished.


Presented by Soho Rep and Young Jean Lee's Theater Company at Soho Rep, 46 Walker St., NYC. Jan. 14–Feb. 14. Tue.–Sun., 7:30 p.m. (Additional performance Sat., Jan. 16, 3 p.m.) (212) 352-3101, (866) 811-4111, www.theatermania.org, or www.sohorep.org.
 

 
Subscribe to Back Stage

More Off Broadway

Mariela

NY Review: 'Mariela en el Desierto (Mariela in the Desert)'
Zulema Clares' masterful portrayal of a woman who puts her family ahead of her art breathes life into Karen Zacarías... More »

    ADVERTISEMENT

    Unscripted Blog


    View Other Blogs »       Visit Unscripted »

    Sponsors

    Back Stage Video

    Duncan Stewart, director of casting at National Artists Management Company, talks about opening every submission and what he wants to see in a headshot.; casting; Duncan Stewart; headshot; new york city; open submissions; Duncan Steward, director of casting, talks about what he wants from an actor in a general meeting, mainly truth, likability, and lack of ego.; advice; casting; Duncan Stewart; new york city; tips; Duncan Stewart, director of casting, talks about what he expects from an audition and common mistakes actors make.; advice; auditions; casting; Duncan Stewart; new york city; Alaine Alldaffer breaks down the real role of a casting direcor.; Alaine Alldaffer; casting; casting director; Grey Gardens; play; stage; theater; Casting director Alaine Alldaffer talks about casting "Saved" and all the misconceptions about being an actor in New York City.; Alaine Alldaffer; casting director; NYC theatre; play; saved; NY casting director Bernie Telsey describes what actors need to know before walking into an audition. (Part 1 of 2) ; Bernie Telsey; casting director; We spoke with casting director Mark Teschner about working on soap operas. (Part 1 of 3) ; General Hospital; Mark Teschner; soap opera; NY casting director Bernie Telsey describes how to give your best audition. (Part 2 of 2) ; Bernie Telsey; casting director; We spoke with casting director Mark Teschner about working on soap operas. Need only beautiful people apply? (Part 2 of 3) ; General Hospital; Mark Teshner; soap opera; We spoke with casting director Mark Teschner about auditioning for soap operas. (Part 3 of 3) ; General Hospital; Mark Teschner; soap opera; Videos for the Back Stage News & Features section.

    Events Calendar

    ADVERTISEMENT