READ THE REVIEWS:

April 16, 2012

Peering through her silver lorgnette, the martini-packing woman with the big jewelry is woozy with disorientation. “There’s certainly nothing familiar about this terrain,” says the woman, Babe, an aging heiress played by Shirley Knight in the murky stew of exotica called “In Masks Outrageous and Austere,” which opened on Monday night at the Culture Project.

READ THE REVIEW

April 16, 2012

Too many shows these days are workshopped or focus-grouped to death. As a result, they’re nicely crafted but comfortably safe. “In Masks Outrageous and Austere” is the exact opposite.

READ THE REVIEW
New York Daily News
BigThumbs_DOWN

Joe
Dziemianowicz

April 16, 2012

A kidnapped billionairess and her bisexual husband. Three gay centurions. A mystery woman who keeps her dimwitted son on a leash. And a blazing fire on the beach. They’re all part of the crazy mess that is Tennessee Williams’ final full-length play, “In Masks Outrageous and Austere.”

READ THE REVIEW
Huffington Post
BigThumbs_DOWN

David
Finkle

April 17, 2012

When you sit through something as turgid, as ludicrous as In Masks Outrageous and Austere, Tennessee Williams’s last play — or so we’re led to believe of a manuscript cobbled together by other peddler-meddlers, supposedly including a computer — you spend much of the slow-moving time wondering whom the roiling cauldron of picked-over Williams obsessions serves. Among the groups, it definitely doesn’t benefit are theater audiences.

READ THE REVIEW
Backstage
BigThumbs_MEH

Erik
Haagensen

April 16, 2012

It’s hard to know what to make of "In Masks Outrageous and Austere." Tennessee Williams’ last full-length play was left uncompleted at the time of his death in 1983. Writer Gavin Lambert, a friend of the playwright who had been working as an unofficial dramaturge on the project, squirreled the manuscript away, not releasing it until 2005. In 2007 it was announced that Gore Vidal, who adapted several of Williams’ works to the big screen and was a lifelong friend, would finish the work for a Broadway production, but those plans languished. Now director David Schweizer has compiled a playing script and given the show a fevered multimedia presentation. Starring veteran Williams actor Shirley Knight, "Masks" is a fascinating mess.

READ THE REVIEW