Kristine Nielsen and James Earl Jones. Photo: Joan Marcus |
You Can’t Take it with You, but You Can Enjoy it a Lot While
You Are in the Theater
By Lauren Yarger
They don’t get much better than this. A wonderful play with a
dream cast, lovingly directed by Scott Ellis.
Moss Hart and George S. Kauffman’s Pulitzer-Prize winning
play You Can’t Take It With You is the
star-studded revival on Broadway that has me smiling this fall. The antics of
the zany Sycamore family play out in a rambling old house crammed full of
eclectic knickknacks and collections as unique as its inhabitants (designed by David
Rockwell).
There is
a hodgepodge of people living in the house, headed by Penelope
Sycamore (comedic genius Kristine Nielsen), who decided to become a novelist
one day when a typewriter was delivered by mistake, and her husband, Paul (Mark
Linn-Baker), who spends his time developing fireworks in the basement with Mr.
DePinna (Patrick Kerr), who delivered ice one year and who just never left….
Daughter Essie
(Annaleigh Ashford)contantly practices the ballet she learns from Boris
Kolenkhov (Reg Rogers), who escaped Russia before the revolution and makes
candies for shy husband, Ed (a delightful Will Brill who evokes Mr. Bean) to
sell when he isn’t busy composing something for her to dance to on the
xylophone (Ashford’s attempted dancing is a hoot).
Meanwhile,
Grandpa Vanderhof (James Earl Jones) collects snakes, drunken actress, Gay
Wellington (Julie Halston), falls asleep in one of the rooms, Grand Duchess
Olga Katrina (Elizabeth Ashley) grants an audience and IRS agent Wilbur C.
Henderson (Karl Kenzer) wants to know why Grandpa never has paid any income
tax. (Vanderhof walked away from his stressful business and the money it
brought a long time ago. He prefers not to think about money….)
Now, throw
into that mix a love story. Daughter Alice Sycamore (Rose Byrne “Bridemaids,”
“Damages”) has fallen in love with Tony Kirby (Fran Kanz), son of wealthy
Anthony P. (Byron Jennings) and Miriam
Kirby (Johanna Day) who shows up gown-draped and wearing a tiara (thanks to
brilliant costume design by Jane
Greenwood) on the wrong night.
Alice is
mortified at the thought of the proper and “normal” Kirbys meeting her family
and sparks do fly (the most entertaining of which are watching Day’s face at
the sight of Ashford fluttering about). Chaos ensues when government agents
show up to investigate explosives in the house and throw everyone in jail.
You Can’t Take It With You, first
presented in 1936, was adapted for film and went on to win the Academy Award.
Much of the humor, particularly about taxes and the government’s uses of them,
still are relevant. So are the themes about family and unconditional love.
·
“Life is kind of beautiful if you just let it come
at you.”
·
“The only thing that matters is that we love each
other.”
It doesn’t get
much simpler than that.
Nielsen is
brilliant as the mother writing lusty romances and Ellis skillfully keeps the
stars from competing with each other, or from walking over Byrne, who is making
her Broadway debut. He miscasts the role of servant Rheba (Crystal Dickinson),
however, and Halston is just a bit too over-the-top.
It’s a
lighthearted romp (which probably could use a bit of trimming) into simpler --
and probably better -- times in two hours and 15 minutes (there are three acts and two intermissions).
You Can't Take It With You runs through Feb. 22, 2015 at the Longacre Theatre, 220 West 48th St., NYC. Performances: Tuesday and Thursday at 7 pm; Wednesday, Friday and Saturday at 8 pm; Wednesday and Saturday at 2 pm; Sunday at 3 pm. http://allthewaybroadway.com/
Christian might also like to know:
--God's name taken in vain
2 comments:
this is the best news I'll read online today! Thanks Lauren! January 2015 promises a lot of really good theatre!
This is the best news I'll read online today! January 2015 promises a lot of excellent theatre!
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