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January 30, 2012

The standup comic and sometime actress Janeane Garofalo drops the shtick, more or less, to play a stern Russian Jewish mother in Brooklyn in “Russian Transport,” by Erika Sheffer, a new play from the New Group that opened on Monday night at the Acorn Theater.

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January 30, 2012

What’s this? A thoughtful, well-written domestic drama with something original to say about immigrant families living by old world values in a new world culture? Pinch me! In her provocative debut drama, "Russian Transport," Erika Sheffer draws her characters from the Russian Jewish community of Brooklyn’s Sheepshead Bay — not the sitcom pool. Taking a tip from Arthur Miller’s "A View from the Bridge," tyro scribe acknowledges the criminal underclass that operates in immigrant communities, presenting a constant threat to the stability of families like the one that comes vividly to life here.

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Examiner
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Sandi
Durell

January 31, 2012

The New Group is presenting playwright Erika Sheffer in an off Broadway debut at The Acorn Theatre on Theatre Row. The Ruskies have landed in Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn and might seem like any other low-middle income immigrant Russian Jews, all lovingly cursing at each other but for the fact that there’s more than Misha (Daniel Oreskes) and wife Diana’s (Janeane Garofalo) struggling car service going on. They’re raising two teenagers, Mira (Sarah Steele) and Alex (Raviv Ullman), each hiding their own secrets, aside from big brother annoying little sister whenever possible.

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Backstage
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David
Sheward

January 30, 2012

As Tolstoy famously said, all happy families are alike. That does not mean that all unhappy families are inherently interesting or should have plays written about them. The immigrant clan depicted in Erika Sheffer’s "Russian Transport," presented by the New Group, has some potentially fascinating quirks, but the novice playwright has settled for familiar plot twists, and there are too many structural flaws to ignore.

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January 31, 2012

Playwright Erika Sheffer makes an impressive debut with Russian Transport, receiving its world premiere in a New Group production at the Acorn Theatre on Theatre Row. While the play may stumble in spots, it is impossible to dismiss Sheffer’s command of storytelling and zestful, pungent dialogue.

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January 31, 2012

At the start of Russian Transport, an air mattress spontaneously inflates out of a cabinet and onto the living-room floor of a house in Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn. It’s a striking image, and hits just the right note of invasive tumescence for Erika Sheffer’s engrossing moral thriller. The play’s first scenes seem to promise a night of familiar domestic comedy, with a Russian-immigrant twist: Misha (Daniel Oreskes) is the put-upon papa, who runs a struggling car service; Diana (Janeane Garofalo) is his dour, bossy wife; Alex (Raviv Ullman) and Mira (Sarah Steele) are their bickering teenage kids. But with the arrival from abroad of Diana’s brother Boris (an impressive Morgan Spector), the family veers into ugly new territory.

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Associated Press
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Jocelyn
Noveck

January 31, 2012

Some families have trouble communicating. The immigrant family at the center of Erika Sheffer’s "Russian Transport," the latest production from the talented director Scott Elliott at The New Group, is not one of them.

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January 30, 2012

The new family drama “Russian Transport” isn’t edgy or groundbreaking. Rather, it’s a good old-fashioned delicacy: a solid yarn, well told.

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