Corrie Off-B'way!
Well, reports of the demise of commercial Off-Broadway may have been premature. Two adventurous producers have made the deal to bring the London production of My Name Is Rachel Corrie to one of its last outposts, the Minetta Lane Theatre, this October.
Nut graph from the Times today:
Pam Pariseau and Dena Hammerstein, partners in James Hammerstein Productions, are bringing the play, critically acclaimed in London, to the Minetta Lane Theater in Greenwich Village. Previews are to begin on Oct. 5, with an opening scheduled for Oct. 15. The play is to run for 48 performances, closing on Nov. 19.
This seems a perfectly fitting venue. The Minetta Lane is a beautiful small space, it's in the Village, with a politically sympathetic audience built in, and which also attracts the kind of adventuresome tourists that made the play such a success on the West End. Seems like a good choice.
And so the guessing game is over. Who knows what took so long. Waiting on the Public and other high profile non-profits? They must have passed. Ironically, Alan Rickman & co. may profit by default... But all along, a commercial mounting has seemed the only way to go with this controversial piece of material. No funders, no grants, no board. Just a committed producing team who doesn't have to answer to anyone. Could it be that such a model is the last best bet for guarantees of free speech in the theatre?
I won't pick bones with the article's account of the controversy. Obviously to say "what happened is a matter of debate" is itself...a matter of debate. The Times does get a highly diplomatic response from NYTW:
"Although the Royal Court and its collaborators have decided to produce 'My Name Is Rachel Corrie' commercially, the New York Theater Workshop is pleased to learn that New York audiences will have an opportunity to see this powerful play," Richard Kornberg, a spokesman for the workshop, said yesterday. "We're especially pleased that Dena Hammerstein is the producer because she produced in London one of the workshop's biggest hits, 'Dirty Blonde.' "
I can hear the relief in that actually. Although we'll see if the fall run of the play stirs up the old ghosts. No doubt the reviews will have to assess in paragraph one, was canceling it the right decision.
You gotta love, by the way, "Although the Royal Court and its collaborators have decided to produce 'My Name Is Rachel Corrie' commercially..." As if NYTW was still awaiting a call? As if it was still the Court who dropped out, and for money!
The big question a commercial production raises, of course, is... what about that "context"? One thing that most distinguishes the experience of going to a commercial production as opposed to a company is the absence of any supporting materials or, usually, post-show talkbacks. Commercial producers are great believers in letting the play stand for itself because...it's cheaper! (And generic program services like Playbill keep it that way.) Non-profits may get special grants and funding to cover all the dramaturgy and events they do around a play. So it will be interesting to see if Hammerstein and Pariseau make any gesture toward contextualizing at all. Will they feel pressure to do so? Or will they assume--rightly--that by this point the press coverage is providing the necessary background?
BTW, for the record, yes, Dena's father-in-law was the Hammerstein. (She must be married to son James?) How fitting. In their own way R & H, of course, made a specialty of taking on mildly confrontational social issues. Some might even say the play's Rachel Corrie even seems like a Mary Martin-esque plucky heroine!
5 comments:
Great. I can't wait to see the pullquote from this in the ads:
"Rachel Corrie is ... plucky!"
Garrett Eisler, The Playgoer
From the NYT:
Ms. Pariseau said. "Our hope is that people will form an opinion based on that [the play itself], as opposed to all the other stuff surrounding it."
That sounds to me like a good indication of where the producers will be going with "contextualization": happily, nowhere.
I liked the comment about Rachel Corrie being plucky; like picture Corrie washing her hair in the Gaza Strip--except ah whoops the Israelis cut the water supply whenever they want to--singing, "I'm gonna wash The Man right out of my hair," the Man being, the IDF.
Of course, the NY Times had to do its usual job of faux objectivity in its indulging the NYTW. And even though the NYTW was "diplomatic"--did they really have any choice? I can't help but see the imprint of "genius slighted" in their comment. "Oh, we're so glad, because Dena Hammerstein produced one of OUR productions in London." Puulleeezzz, the American public is very forgiving. It's like Clinton. If he had just said, "I made a mistake and had oral sex in the Oval Office," people would have understood. If the NYTW would have just said, "we may have made a mistake and we're glad to see the production come to NY city," END OF COMMENT, they would get kudos. But no, no, no. We have to hear a version of "I did not have relations with that woman." We've got to hear them put a plug in for themselves.
I actually find them entertaining. Every step they make is like material for a standup comic.
But I am more than anything happy for New York, because I do think the fiasco tainted the city's image. And I don't think everyone would have forgotten it as easily as other things that have come and gone, simply because New York represents itself as "progressive" and "cosmopolitan," and I don't think being anti-Palestinian makes you cosmopolitan anymore--at least not in the world, which is the ultimate market of New York today.
Unfortunately, Playgoer, I don't think that MNiRC is representative of the kinds of plays commercial houses are generally interested in. It's more likely that the nonprofits passed on it, BUT that Alan Rickman is friends with one of the producers (I've forgotten which one) and was able to use that connection to get the theater. I doubt that a commercial theater, just coming across the script, would have been interested in MNiRC, frankly, even though it is the least political of the amazingly large body of work on Corrie's life and the events in Gaza.
And are all of you in New York going to go as a group? Maybe the Playgoer crew could get a discount.
Re: the nonprofits passing...
Veteran reporter Patrick Pacheco had a good point this weekend on NY1. Subsciption-season theatres plan way in advance and it's very possible most had already booked their slate of plays by the time Rickman came pitching last month. (In fact premliminary schedules were likely already being set back in March, at the time of the Corrie bruhaha itself.)
Now, for sure, if the Public, say, REALLY wanted to do it, they'd find a way. Schedules change. But if nothing else, it certainly would have provided these theatre with a convenient excuse to pass.
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