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November 21, 2011

The gifts referred to in the title of “Blood and Gifts,” a superb new play by J. T. Rogers about the long history behind the American involvement in Afghanistan, are on ominous view throughout the play. Big boxes are carried onstage and cracked open to reveal piles of artillery. Shiny new rifles are waved in the air like harmless toys. Suitcases full of dollars are handed over with a cool smile.

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November 21, 2011

In his review of Blood and Gifts at London’s National Theatre last year, esteemed critic Michael Billington hailed J.T. Rogers as “that rare creature: an American dramatist who writes about global issues.” After you’ve washed the chalky tang of British condescension from your mouth, you have to concede Billington’s point: There aren’t many new American plays painted with a broad historical or geographical brush. Rogers has labored to fill that void, first with his Rwandan-genocide shocker, The Overwhelming (2006), and now with a historical docudrama, which tracks the unintended consequences of CIA interference in the war between Afghan rebels and Soviet occupying forces, 1981–91.

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Associated Press
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Peter
Santilli

November 21, 2011

The opening scene of J.T. Rogers’ ambitious and thoroughly captivating spy thriller "Blood and Gifts" instantly reflects the daunting complexity of the play’s subject — the 1980s Soviet war in Afghanistan and the covert, proxy warfare that surrounded it. Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2011/11/21/entertainment/e171805S21.DTL#ixzz1eS4cJPMU

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Talkin' Broadway
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Matthew
Murray

November 21, 2011

If you’re tired of geopolitical wrangling on the news shows you watch or the websites you read, J.T. Rogers is positing the ideal solution: Go to the theatre! Specifically, the Mitzi E. Newhouse Theater at Lincoln Center, where Rogers’s play, Blood and Gifts, has just opened. And no, I’m not kidding: Though the show is as serious and in-depth an examination of the flashpoints and ignitions behind one of the most fiery hotbeds of conflict in the Middle East, Afghanistan, as you’re likely to find, it’s also surprisingly entertaining — and theatre through and through.

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Backstage
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Erik
Haagensen

November 21, 2011

In "Blood and Gifts," playwright J.T. Rogers takes a bracing, multisided look at how America came to be mired in a war against fundamentalism in Afghanistan. Rogers’ pungent writing is full of sharp characterizations as it painstakingly charts how decisions made with even the best of intentions can lead to chaos. Add in the requisite amount of self-serving choices, and it’s a wonder that anything positive ever gets accomplished. Evoking such writers as Graham Greene and John le Carré, Rogers nevertheless asserts a unique voice in this gripping and absorbing drama.

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