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Associated Press
BigThumbs_MEH

April 27, 2010

The financial finagling is not as much fun as it should be in "Enron," a flashy yet lumbering docudrama that has arrived on Broadway trailing rave reviews from England, where maybe they take a much keener delight in all-American chicanery.

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HOLLYWOOD REPORTER BigThumbs_DOWN

April 27, 2010

Bottom Line: Stylized theatrical depiction of the notorious energy company’s rise and fall doesn’t provide a satisfying return on the audience’s investment.

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CHICAGO TRIBUNE BigThumbs_UP

April 27, 2010

Jeffrey Keith Skilling, the former president of Enron Corp., has been quietly serving a 24-year sentence at a federal prison in Colorado. The misdoings of the convicted architect of America’s biggest corporate bankruptcy have faded from the front pages, replaced by similarly arcane financial chicanery perpetuated by others — not in energy trading, but in the packaging of toxic mortgages.

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Backstage
BigThumbs_DOWN

April 27, 2010

Playwright Lucy Prebble gets points for ambition. "Enron" wants to be a bold, slashing piece of political theater that exposes the greed and selfishness at the heart of American capitalism through the titular energy company’s collapse. I’m in sympathy with her point of view but unpersuaded by her methodology. Her play is like a big, shiny, beautifully wrapped package that once eagerly ripped opened reveals a horde of Styrofoam peanuts through which you search vainly for the anticipated present.

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NEW YORK TIMES BigThumbs_DOWN

April 27, 2010

In Lucy Prebble’s “Enron,” the flashy but labored economics lesson that opened on Tuesday night at the Broadhurst Theater, money doesn’t just talk. It sings. It dances. It puts on funny animal costumes. And of course it blows bubbles.

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April 28, 2010

The "Enron" that opened on Broadway last night isn’t a lecture or a documentary. It’s a show. After snoozing through many well-meaning tracts about Iraq, the prospect of a play about a financial meltdown wasn’t appealing. But "Enron" is a whip-smart, edge-of-your-seat ride that’d rival anything at Six Flags — there are even raptor-headed businessmen prancing around.

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April 28, 2010

Industry doomsayers were all wet about "Enron." This London bombshell is both a dazzling piece of entertainment and a gripping cautionary tale about the criminal chicanery that eviscerated the most respected corporate body in America. Still, it cost a bundle (a reputed $5 million) to haul this hi-tech show into town, and everyone’s wondering if starstruck musical junkies will part with their coin for a straight play. What’s clear is that the sensational stage effects deliver the same blood-pumping thrills of a musical, wrapped around a play, by Lucy Prebble, with more brains in its head than any tuner since "Assassins."

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Usa Today
BigThumbs_UP

Elysa
Gardner

April 29, 2010

With Goldman Sachs executives answering to a Senate committee this week, the latest round of financial wizards under fire after being accused of corrupt practices, perhaps the Enron scandal of 2001 seems like yesterday’s news.

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