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Review: In ‘Plaza Suite,’ the Ghosts of #MeToo Haunt the Halls

A review of Plaza Suite by Jesse Green | March 28, 2022

You could, I suppose, investigate “Plaza Suite” as a catalog of male failings in midcentury America; certainly “The Odd Couple,” a Simon comedy from 1965, can support such a reading, even if its two female characters are birdbrains. In any case, that’s not what the current production is offering. Rather, it seems to hope we will look forgivingly enough on our benighted past to excuse it with a “that’s how things were” shrug and laugh.

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An Evening Spent at Home Beats a Night at this “Plaza Suite”

Juan Michael Porter II | March 28, 2022

What does it say about our society that Plaza Suite, the first Neil Simon play to return to Broadway in over 11 years, and the first since his death in 2018, is a middling affair buried in milquetoast acting with inept direction? During his heyday, Simon defined what Broadway comedy meant. Nicknamed “Doc,” for his […]

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‘Confederates’ Mightily Walks Down the Elusive Road to Freedom

Ran Xia | March 27, 2022

Time sways back and forth like a Newton’s Cradle in Dominique Morisseau’s new biting comedy Confederates, where the differences between understanding, or experiencing racism from a historical, intellectual context, and being confronted with it in a visceral way, become stark clear.  The play tackles the subject of slavery in the raw, as well as its […]

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