Carnival Round the Central Figure
Opening Night: January 17, 2011
Closing: January 30, 2011
Theater: IRT Theater
Carnival Round the Central Figure concerns a young dying man who must cope with the last moments of life while a circus of chatter, denial, positive thinking, and religious fervor swirls crazily around him. One girl tries to walk to his bedside simply to tell him it’s okay to go, but is stopped by the absurd razzle-da…zzle around him.
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January 20, 2011
“How do you think he looks? Better?” the dying man’s wife asks a visitor to his hospital room. The hopefulness in her voice is unmistakable. But the gaunt 38-year-old patient is clearly not long for this world. Still, his wife babbles on about his future, using words as a wall to hold back her despair and support her denial.
READ THE REVIEWJanuary 18, 2011
Diana Amsterdam’s Carnival Round The Central Figure, now at IRT, is a vaudevillian meditation on mortality, weaving a deathbed scene in-between gospel numbers from a fictitious evangelical TV show. Despite the fine efforts of director Karen Kohlass, these transitions are often jarring and the dialogue is often maddeningly repetitive and frustrating in its circuitous nature.
READ THE REVIEWRachel Merrill
Moss
January 14, 2011
Western medicine, religion and death—oh my! Death and the fun-house carnival of skewed expectations and manipulations that surround it are the focus of Diana Amsterdam’s play, Carnival Round the Central Figure, now playing at the IRT Theatre.
READ THE REVIEWMitch
Montgomery
January 17, 2011
Comedies don’t come much darker than Diana Amsterdam’s "Carnival Round the Central Figure," a hard-core but justified lampooning of the strange etiquette we adhere to when watching loved ones pass away. Amsterdam’s relentless script, which premiered in a student production 16 years ago, makes a glib burlesque out of the oblique religious platitudes, idle chitchat, and straight-up dishonesty we typically inflict upon the dying. Director Karen Kohlhaas has jauntily pieced IRT’s current production together, and though the play’s intense ruminations on the end of life can get very bleak, it makes a touching case for, as Sigmund Freud said, making friends with the necessity of dying.
READ THE REVIEWSandi
Durell
January 18, 2011
The topic of death and dying can be off-putting even if you are one of the cognoscenti, making it one of the ‘untouchable’ topics of conversation or even thought. Not so for Diana Amsterdam, Carnival’s playwright. In fact, it’s a playground to explore the ways in which humanity deals with the ultimate truth through religion, silly chatter and platitudes. A production of the IRT Theatre, it is directed by Karen Kohlhaas with all the intensity it deserves.
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