Winter Party
Feb 25 - Mar 2, 2009

 
  the national gay and lesbian task force invites you to join more than 10,000 guests from around the world for the 2009 winter party festival, february 25 to march 2, 2009 . . . . . featured events . . . . . thursday february 26, 2009   score nightclub presents blast off featuring dj brett henrichsen . . . . . friday february 27, 2009   halo lounge miami presents halo happy hour featuring dj george figares . . . . . friday february 27, 2009   johnny chisholm and just circuit present five ring circuit featuring djs  manny lehman, eddy baez, joe gauthreaux, warren gluck, wendy hunt, lydia prim and more . . . . . friday february 27, 2009   living room nightclub presents bruthaz beach bash featuring djs oren nizri and maximus 3000 . . . . . saturday february 28, 2009   the task force presents under one sun pool party featuring dj roland belmares . . . . . saturday february 28, 2009   steel nightclub presents whip: a leather fantasy featuring dj ted eiel . . . . . saturday february 28, 2009   the task force presents mercury rising featuring dj alyson calagna . . . . . sunday march 1, 2009   the task forces presents winter party beach party featuring dj tracy young . . . . . sunday march 1, 2009   the task forces presents orbit featuring dj tony moran . . . . .

   
  The Seagull  
   
   
  2008
Gypsy
Boeing Boeing
Sunday in the Park
Les Liaisons Dangereuses
The Homecoming
August: Osage County


2007

ABT Romeo & Juliet
Coram Boy

Journey's End
Some Men
Spring Awakening
Company

2006
The Vertical Hour

The Little Dog Laughed
Times Are A-Changin
Grey Gardens
A Chorus Line
Heartbreak House
Avenue Q
Rainy Days & Mondays

Absinthe
Faith Healer
SHOUT! The Mod Musical
The ThreePenny Opera
Spelling Bee
Getting Home
Marga Gomez
Rent10
Joan Rivers
Kismet
Light in the Piazza

2005
Sweeney Todd
Trailer Park
Movin Out

 
 
 
     
 
Date   :   September 18, 2008
 
 
Show   :   THE SEAGULL
 
 
Venue   :   The Walter Kerr Theater, 219 W 48 Street, NYC
 
 
Web   :   www.seagulltheplay.com
 
   
  It’s night in a forest in Russia.  There are candles burning on tree stumps and roughhewn benches.  Amidst a stand of trees, there’s a young man, as slender as the bare trees around him.  The mood is elegiac, and yet, with the sound of animated voices approaching through the woods, also anticipatory.  Such is Chekhov: rueful, though not without hope, as if to say: This is life; we must endure with humor.  And make no mistake; there is much amusement to be found in the Royal Court’s critically acclaimed production of The Seagull, now transferred to the Walter Kerr.

In Chekhov’s world, there are those who suffer—and those who suffer more.  Everyone in The Seagull is so caught up in the drama of his/her own life, seeking an ear wherever one can be found—to unload, to complain, to self-aggrandize.  For the truth is, everyone in The Seagull is an actor, nearly always performing on a stage of his or her own imagining.  These are characters who seem possessed of an unwavering belief that every life merits a full-length play.  And the marvel of Chekhov’s tragicomedy (and for this production, Christopher Hampton’s new version) is how even the supporting characters are rendered fully imagined—and fully desirous of their own center stage monologue.

But then that’s to be expected, given that every character in The Seagull orbits in the incandescence that is the actress Arkadina.  And while it’s likely that Kristin Scott-Thomas is the draw for a significant part of the audience, her Arkadina does not monopolize a viewer’s attention at the expense of the other players.  Scott-Thomas’s portrayal offers a woman in poignant denial of her imminent eclipse, as she rallies her wiles and talents in an effort to stave off the inevitable.  For as the once-illustrious Arkadina knows all too well, the light changes—and adjustments must be made.

Skillfully directed by Ian Rickson, this Seagull has flown almost completely intact from its
London run, thereby lending an additional layer of camaraderie amongst the actors—that is, save for new-to-the-family Peter Sarsgaard who plays the outsider, Trigorin.  Perhaps then it’s fitting that Sarsgaard employs a broad American accent, whilst everyone around him sounds a product of Rugby and Eton—yet it proves to be a discomfiting choice for some in the audience, several of whom spent the entirety of intermission unable to speak of anything else.

The truth is, as played by Sarsgaard, Trigorin hardly seems to possess the attributes ascribed to him by both Arkadina and Nina—a situation that leaves a large hole in this production, and one is grateful for the scenes where Trigorin is offstage.  For it’s then that one sees a Seagull that beautifully mines the humor in the inherent promise of life’s dreams—and the poignancy in their passing.
 
 
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