Shatner’s World: We Just Live In It
Opening Night: February 16, 2012
Closing: March 4, 2012
Theater: Music Box Theatre
This two-hour show takes audiences on a voyage through William Shatner’s life and career, from Shakespearean stage actor to internationally known icon and raconteur, known as much for his unique persona as for his expansive body of work on television and film.
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February 16, 2012
If you’re going to have the chutzpah to call your show “Shatner’s World: We Just Live In It …,” it is probably wise to enter joking. William Shatner, who does not need an introduction to anyone who has made it to the second sentence of this review, does precisely that in the chatty, digressive and often amusing tour of his unusual acting career, which opened Thursday night at the Music Box Theater for a brief Broadway run.
READ THE REVIEWFebruary 16, 2012
To quote a famous Star Trek catchphrase, resistance is futile to William Shatner’s one-person show, Shatner’s World: We Just Live in It. The octogenarian actor—here making his first Broadway appearance in a half-century–is such an engagingly hammy and funny raconteur that only the most curmudgeonly will begrudge him this celebration of his life and career.
READ THE REVIEWJeremy
Gerard
and
Philip
Boroff
February 16, 2012
Early in William Shatner’s one-man show on Broadway, he describes understudying Christopher Plummer at the Stratford Shakespeare Festival. When Plummer fell ill, a young, ambitious but unrehearsed Shatner stepped into the demanding role of Henry V.
READ THE REVIEWJonathan
Mandell
February 16, 2012
There is the William Shatner, long forgotten, who appeared with Spencer Tracy in “Judgment at Nuremberg” and replaced an ill Christopher Plummer as Henry V at the Stratford Festival. There is the familiar William Shatner of Captain Kirk in “Star Trek” and Denny Crane in “Boston Legal.” And then there is the William Shatner of “Shatner’s World: We Just Live In It,” the one-man show which marks his return to Broadway for the first time in 50 years.
READ THE REVIEWFebruary 16, 2012
William Shatner’s new one-man show is not the most challenging piece of theater you’re likely to see this year. You’ve probably also seen more inspired one-person shows. But it does make for a fun evening of personal reminiscence, gossip, video clips and old-fashioned humor – along with one of his strange musical performances.
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