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March 6, 2012

Kathleen Chalfant and John Cunningham are transfixing as Boston blue bloods whose patrician airs and whimsical eccentricities mask the shambles their lives have become in the Keen Company revival of “Painting Churches,” at the Clurman Theater.

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March 6, 2012

Don’t let the title throw you: This is no epic about Michelangelo and the Sistine Chapel. The subject of Tina Howe’s play “Painting Churches” is an elderly couple named Fanny and Gardner Church. And it’s their daughter, Mags, who’s working on their portrait.

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March 8, 2012

Time has not been kind to Gardner Church (Cunningham), an elderly Boston poet who is losing more of his faculties every day, or to his longtime wife, Fanny (Chalfant), whose role in his world is increasingly custodial. And time has been unkinder still to the play they are stuck in: Tina Howe’s Painting Churches, a 1984 Pulitzer Prize finalist that has been revived to disenchanting effect by Carl Forsman for his Keen Company. From the groan of a title—the Churches’ daughter, Mags (an inadequate Turnbull), is an artist who wants to paint their portraits—to the creak of the exposition and the continuous whine of Mags’s dialogue, Howe’s play is a compendium of unpleasant noises, amplified in a plodding production.

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Entertainment Weekly
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Lisa
Schwarzbaum

March 7, 2012

Psychic tension between adult children and their aging parents makes for relevant drama in any decade. So does the artistic urge to capture reality, and the tendency of stubborn reality to evade artistic capture. In that regard, the Keen Company’s Off Broadway revival of Painting Churches, Tina Howe’s critically esteemed portrait of an artist and her aging parents, is as relevant today as it was when the award-winning play premiered in 1983.

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Newsday
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Linda
Winer

March 6, 2012

Don’t let the genteel setting — the classic window outlines and gracious, disembodied bookcase — fool you. Despite the apparent civility in this old-money house on Beacon Hill, chaos — both trivial and profound — runs deeply amok in "Painting Churches."

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Associated Press
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Jocelyn
Noveck

March 7, 2012

Few things in this world are more subjective than art. What’s beautiful to me may, of course, be ugly as sin to you.

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