Review: In ‘Flying Over Sunset,’ Getting High With the Stars
At least there are compensations in the typically gorgeous technical wizardry of the Lincoln Center Theater production. The lighting (by Bradley King) and the projections (by 59 Productions) on Beowulf Boritt’s swirling-circles set — along with the immersively psychedelic sound by Dan Moses Schreier — bring us closer to the sensation of melting consciousness than the script ever manages. At times even the costumes (by Toni-Leslie James) seem to be tripping. And Dorrance’s choreography for the show’s opening, arranging the cast’s varying footfalls in rhythmic counterpoint, is sublime.
These are not enough to outweigh Lapine’s failure to dramatize what he evidently sees as the life-enhancing possibilities of mind-altering drugs. If those possibilities exist, surely they are not to be found in a direct linkup of symptoms and cures, as proposed by “Flying Over Sunset.”
Keep Reading
‘Flying Over Sunset’: A Trippy Spectacle with Not a Lot to Say
There is something inherently spiritual in the ways in which the writer and philosopher Aldous Huxley spoke of his relationship with the hallucinogenic drug, LSD. “It’s a very salutary thing to realize that the rather dull universe in which most of us spend most of our time is not the only universe there is. I […]
Read More
‘Company’: A Glorious Revival Revolves Around an Empty Role
It’s never a good thing when the only praise you have for the central performer in the revival of a groundbreaking musical is, “She’s very pretty.” Unfortunately, that, and a pleasant voice, are all that Katrina Lenk brings to her performance as the cipher, Bobbie, in this otherwise marvelous revival of Company. Yes, that’s Bobbie, […]
Read More





