Scenes From an Execution
Opening Night: July 7, 2015
Closing: August 9, 2015
Theater: The 16th Street Theatre
The eternal battle between the artist and the State in Howard Barker’s passionate story of the Venetian painter Galactia, and her collision with the Doge of Venice.
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July 15, 2015
Please, oh please, say that this isn’t goodbye. Jan Maxwell, who recently told Playbill that she was retiring from the stage, is providing audiences with a heartbreaking display of what they’ll be missing when she’s gone. I’d almost call her work in Howard Barker’s “Scenes From an Execution,” which opened on Wednesday night at Atlantic Stage 2 in a first-rate Potomac Theater Project production, the performance of her career. I say “almost” because Ms. Maxwell, a five-time Tony nominee, tends to inspire breathless and definitive pronouncements in whatever her latest role happens to be. That’s been true whether she was portraying a cartoon villainess in an overblown Broadway children’s frolic (“Chitty Chitty Bang Bang”), a jaded New York hostess in a Stephen Sondheim musical (“Follies”) or a highly histrionic actress in a classic satire of life in the theater (“The Royal Family”). If “Scenes From an Execution” is really Ms. Maxwell’s valedictory performance (and might we be allowed a hopeful skepticism?), then she’s going out in a blaze of fireworks. And perhaps it’s appropriate that it should be in the part of a raging, uncompromising artist, as seductive as she is abrasive, whom the world does its best to wear down into banality.
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