Posted by LimelightMike 2012-12-04 00:40:26
Today is Tuesday, December 4, marking the official opening night performance of Manhattan Theatre Club's New York City premiere of Golden Age, Terrence McNally's play about the world of composer Vincenzo Bellini, following previews from November 15, with Lee Pace ("Pushing Daisies") as the nervous 19th-century Sicilian composer whose opera I Puritani is receiving its Paris world premiere in 1835.
According to MTC, "Its opening night of Vincenzo Bellini's new opera I Puritani in Paris, and the Italian composer is determined to win the adulation of not only his audience, but his colleagues and rivals as well. When the curtain falls, will a thunderous ovation cement his prominence? Or has Bellini unwittingly composed his own swan song? Blending 21st-century language with the timeless beauty of 19th-century bel canto opera, Terrence McNally's new play portrays the final act of an artist whose desire for greatness has eclipsed all else."GOLDEN AGE Reviews
Posted by Tom-497 2012-12-04 20:20:40
Bloomberg says ***, which is "Good."
Nevertheless, an entire act is "filled with awkwardly posing singers dropping biographical information and engaging in stupid banter" until Neuwirth appears to improve things. Pace is also "most affecting," especially in his later scenes.
GOLDEN AGE Reviews
Posted by Tom-497 2012-12-04 20:30:53
Backstage is an A-, with praise for the play itself and also for the entire cast.
Lee Pace is an ideal Bellini, charismatic even in self-absorption and gifted with the requisite Byronic handsomeness. Pace excels at communicating Bellinis often internal emotions and uses an effortless period physicality to good effect. Bebe Neuwirths Maria is full of grace, fire, and star quality....
GOLDEN AGE Reviews
Posted by Tom-497 2012-12-04 20:35:56
Entertainment Weekly is a C.
Even in Bellini's poutiest, most self-absorbed moments, Pace is never less than charming. He's the quintessential tortured artist unabashedly romantic, hair askew, throwing himself about the stage with abandon, and voraciously devouring Sicilian blood oranges (Bellini's preferred snack). When he gets ahold of McNally's monologues, Pace can elevate them into arias....
Less effective are the numerous interior monologues written for Bellini's companion/sometime lover Florimo (Will Rogers). Their relationship, though fascinating, gets lost amid the backstage hustle and bustle. So does the object of Bellini's unrequited affection, Neuwirth's Maria Malibran, a Callas-like star who's even called 'my divine one.' Even two-time Tony winner Neuwirth, who can land a laugh with a sharpshooter's precision, ends up looking adrift.
GOLDEN AGE Reviews
Posted by Tom-497 2012-12-04 22:02:47
Newsday is mixed.
... an ambitiously produced but ultimately toothless diversion set backstage at the 1835 premiere of Vincenzo Bellini's last opera, "I Puritani."
Taken at surface value, this is a lark, a playful if overextended imagining of rivalries and obsessions at a time when opera composers were like rock stars in capes, and new operas were events. But McNally uses just enough historical veracity to make the inaccuracies glaring. He leans on stock opera jokes -- you know, the baritone pads his crotch with fruit, the tenor is only concerned about his high F -- while straining for serious poignancy about immortality and art.
GOLDEN AGE Reviews
Posted by Tom-497 2012-12-04 22:09:09
AP is very positive.
In "Golden Age," McNally provides a fascinating, authentic-sounding glimpse of the passions and piques of top-notch performers as they struggle to get themselves and one another through the pressure-cooker nerves of a major opening-night performance.
GOLDEN AGE Reviews
Posted by Tom-497 2012-12-04 22:14:45
NY Times (Isherwood) is mostly negative.
Although Mr. McNallys ardent affection for, and wide knowledge of, opera is unexceptionable, he has not succeeded in breathing life into the famous figures he is dealing with here. They mostly come across as singing stereotypes engaging in trite romantic dalliances and professional rivalries.
GOLDEN AGE Reviews
Posted by Tom-497 2012-12-04 22:21:41
Hollywood Reporter is fairly negative.
Unfortunately, McNally has not infused the proceedings with either the sparkling wit or emotional resonance necessary to sustain the plays two-and-a-half hour running time. There is the occasional striking moment, such as when Malibran dramatically recites the text of one of the operas arias (echoing a similar scene in Master Class). But for the most part the tepid action will best be appreciated by opera-loving audience members intimately familiar with the historical milieu and the real-life figures being depicted.
GOLDEN AGE Reviews
Posted by Tom-497 2012-12-04 22:25:31
NJ Newsroom is negative.
It is disappointing to report that little actually happens upon the backstage setting handsomely designed by Santo Loquasto. The playwright assembles some potentially interesting historical characters within a stressful situation and after a ton of exposition all ever we get is some 1830s opera gossip, a few minor hissy-fits and the occasional remark about how life is short and art outlasts everything.
GOLDEN AGE Reviews
Posted by Kad 2012-12-04 22:33:16
Adam Feldman at Time Out gave it 2/5.
"Directed stiffly by Walter Bobbie, Golden Age winds up replicating the very sinshackery, vulgarity, dull expositionthat its version of Bellini decries onstage. The objects of McNallys obsession deserve better than maudlin fan fiction."
GOLDEN AGE Reviews
Posted by Tom-497 2012-12-04 22:52:02
Matthew Murray at Talkin Broadway is mixed.
McNally finds his surest expression when he's addressing Bellini's problems most directly, usually by way of his tempestuous muse Maria Malibran (Bebe Neuwirth).... Later still, Gioacchino Rossini (F. Murray Abraham), who's afraid he's drained himself of every worthwhile idea, also calls to give Bellini a glimpse into a different kind of future.
These characters show what McNally was truly attempting here, and how he's come so close to succeeding....
Unfortunately, this assurance has not extended to the other figures in this saga. Far less moving, and noticeably more annoying, are the vocalists McNally has constructed to represent the opening night cast....
GOLDEN AGE Reviews
Posted by Tom-497 2012-12-04 22:59:42
NY Post is 3 out of 4.
... the playwrights liveliest effort in years....
Director Walter Bobbie brings the same comic flair he did in The School for Lies, setting a brisk but unhurried tempo thats perfect for the farcical goings-on....
Pace (The Normal Heart, TVs Pushing Daisies) has the debonair good looks of a golden-age Hollywood heartthrob. He elegantly underplays Bellinis exhilarated highs and his depressed lows, and his rapport with Neuwirth is tainted with lovely wistfulness.
GOLDEN AGE Reviews
Posted by Tom-497 2012-12-04 23:06:18
Daily News is 2 out of 5.
McNally is onto something by contrasting Bellinis bruising creative tunnel vision with his delicate ego and health. But as it unfolds at the Theatre-Italien in Paris, the story never gets traction or sets off bright sparks. There are just some fake lightning flashes as Bellini rides out his musical babys birth and juggles needy people in his orbit.