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May 20, 2010

Too many times, a mediocre production of a play her alded as a classic leaves you wondering what the fuss is all about. A dull "Othello" — oh, the agony. An endless "Death of a Salesman" — death of an audience.

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March 25, 2010

The gauzy draping that usually trims productions of “The Glass Menagerie” has been packed up and put away. Do not come to the Laura Pels Theater, where the Roundabout Theater Company’s terrific new revival of Tennessee Williams’s career-igniting play opened on Wednesday night, looking for a standard dose of weepy Southern lyricism.

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March 25, 2010

Judith Ivey is in her element as Amanda Wingfield in Gordon Edelstein’s new production of Tennessee Williams’ The Glass Menagerie, now at the Roundabout’s Laura Pels Theatre. Her Amanda is deeply Southern, proud as she is desperate, and monstrous yet loving. This is definitely a mother who truly tries to do her best by her children, even if she doesn’t understand them in the least.

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March 25, 2010

Tennessee Williams’ first great play "The Glass Menagerie" is done few favors by helmer Gordon Edelstein’s on-the-nose interpretation, which stages the play in protag (and Williams stand-in) Tom Wingfield’s hotel room and features Tom writing the script throughout the play. Production improves mightily when Tom makes himself scarce in Act II, leaving his shy, disabled sister Laura — and the play — to speak for themselves. Revival at Roundabout’s Laura Pels transferred from New Haven’s Long Wharf Theater on the strength of positive reviews but Gotham ticketbuyers may be less enthrall.

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Entertainment Weekly
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Jeff
Labrecque

March 25, 2010

The future becomes the present, the present the past, and the past turns into everlasting regret if you don’t plan for it,” says Amanda, the shrill and smothering Southern belle who meddles in the stunted lives of her two misfit adult children in The Glass Menagerie. Tennessee Williams’ classic play weaves the tortured memories of time and place into one hypnotic tableau, and The Roundabout Theatre Company resurrects those ghosts in a crafty Off Broadway revival that probes the nerves of its characters so mercilessly that the audience can inhale their desperation and remorse.

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Backstage
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Erik
Haagensen

March 25, 2010

Tennessee Williams’ first Broadway hit gets a thorough shaking in director Gordon Edelstein’s production, imported by Roundabout Theatre Company from Connecticut’s Long Wharf Theatre. The enthralling result is the freshest, most vital account of "The Glass Menagerie" I’ve seen—and I’ve seen my share. Edelstein and his excellent quartet of actors have blown the dust off this beloved 65-year-old classic. It’s a cause for celebration.

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