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January 18, 2008

You may have been wondering just how all those gagmeisters who make their livings contributing jokes to television talk show monologues and sketch reviews have been occupying their time during the long-lived writers’ strike. Well, one possibility would be that they have been funneling their one-liners — and not always their best ones — directly to David Mamet.

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Newsday
BigThumbs_DOWN

April 22, 2014

Take away the gleeful dirty talk and sneak a peak under the exuberantly shameless scams and … or, on second thought, don’t do that. Without the cavalcade of forbidden words and a lingering hope of subversive surprise, there is almost nothing that would identify November as the work of David Mamet.

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Usa Today
BigThumbs_UP

April 22, 2014

This is, after all, a David Mamet play, so we shouldn’t be shocked by President Smith’s potty mouth, or his general harshness in speaking to and about others. What may surprise some fans is how breezy and ultimately tame this satire is." & "Mamet’s punch-line-packed script is zestfully directed by Joe Mantello and served by a first-rate cast. Lane’s timing and expressions are impeccable, whether Smith is having a fit or suppressing a smirk. Laurie Metcalf and Dylan Baker match and enhance the leading man’s witty efficiency as the speechwriter and chief of staff.

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VARIETY BigThumbs_MEH

April 22, 2014

As much as Mamet’s work, it’s also "The Nathan Lane Show," providing the actor with his best comic showcase since The Producers. As widely despised president Charles H.P. Smith, Lane keeps the comedy buoyant with his high-energy turn, balancing unapologetic brashness and boldfaced shysterism with a deluded sense of his own martyrdom.

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New York Daily News
BigThumbs_DOWN

April 22, 2014

It’s called November but this shrill and high-decibel comedy directed by Joe Mantello could have easily been called "The Wild, Wild West Wing." & "In the past Mamet’s work has been incisive, powerful and realistic. Here he goes for an easy, well-worn target and obvious setup: America’s highest office is held by a low-life thug… It’s so broad that November is a satire with a big mouth but no bite.

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NEW YORK POST

April 22, 2014

With a masterly sleight of hand, Nathan Lane turns slightness into giddy fun." & "There’s not much to November, but it’s certainly not the cruelest month. Actually, it’s empty-headed political fun, "Saturday Night Live" at its liveliest.

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April 22, 2014

No playwright curses so well as David Mamet. No actor clowns so well as Nathan Lane. No director is more trusted nowadays than Joe Mantello. And no single producer is producing as as many shows on Broadway nowadays as Jeffrey Richards. So November, David Mamet’s first play to ever open cold on Broadway, should seem like pretty exciting stuff. And while it’s still an uneven, half-baked play, it’s also a good deal of fun.

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THEATERMANIA

April 22, 2014

Nathan Lane gives a masterful performance in David Mamet’s crowd-pleasing comedy about Presidential politics.

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