Mr. & Mrs. Fitch
Opening Night: February 22, 2010
Closing: April 4, 2010
Theater: Second Stage Theatre
Meet gossip columnists Mr. and Mrs. Fitch. When the social circuit no longer provides juicy morsels, they find that great celebrity can appear out of thin air. This wicked new comedy is a scathing look at who is in, who is out and who may not even exist at all.
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February 23, 2010
The first thing you hear is laughter, and it freezes the blood. The loud peals of offstage merriment that begin “Mr. & Mrs. Fitch,” the shrill new comedy by Douglas Carter Beane that opened on Monday night, are made by its title characters, an urbane husband and wife who are terribly, terribly amused by each other.
READ THE REVIEWFebruary 22, 2010
While there’s a kernel of a good comedy idea in Douglas Carter Beane’s "Mr. & Mrs. Fitch," there’s not a lot of charm or conviction to back it up. Director Scott Ellis has recruited an accomplished duo in John Lithgow and Jennifer Ehle to play husband-and-wife gossip columnists, but the playwright doesn’t allow them the breathing room to create characters. Instead, they’re just vessels for verbiage in a show-offy play that, though not short on wit, rams its erudition down your throat with a wearing rat-tat-tat of pop-cultural and literary references.
READ THE REVIEWMatthew
Murray
February 22, 2010
If you think it’s impossible to ever have too much of a good thing, Mr. and Mrs. Fitch will rapidly disabuse you of that notion – at least with regard to epigrams. Playwright Douglas Carter Beane can churn out withering witticisms like no one’s business, but you’d never know from his goopy new outing at Second Stage that the majority of them are usually sparkling, insightful, or useful for some purpose other than serial time-killing.
READ THE REVIEWFebruary 23, 2010
The script for Douglas Carter Beane’s latest comedy, Mr. & Mrs. Fitch, now making its world premiere at Second Stage under Scott Ellis’ direction, consists mostly of warp-speed badinage. But the words are of so entertaining a caliber — and so gloriously delivered by stars John Lithgow and Jennifer Ehle — that audiences likely won’t mind the play’s lack of forward motion.
READ THE REVIEWJoe
Dziemianowicz
February 23, 2010
Douglas Carter Beane’s new comedy about married gossip columnists, "Mr. & Mrs. Fitch," is so awkward and unfunny, it’s almost scandalous.
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