Whatever, Heaven Allows
Opening Night: February 21, 2010
Closing: March 14, 2010
Theater: P.S. 122
Known for its radical and reckless theatricality and winner of the 2009 Spalding Gray Award, avant-garde New York troupe Radiohole’s newest work "Whatever, Heaven Allows" is a star-spangled American meta-melodrama inspired by film director Douglas Sirk’s 1950s potboilers and Milton’s epic Paradise Lost. The heroine is an all- American "Eve" who must save her home from an evil-doer while struggling to find fulfillment in a lasting relationship with a supposedly good man who looks like god.
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February 25, 2010
This Bud’s for you, John and Doug. That’s the poet John Milton and the filmmaker Douglas Sirk, the main sources of inspiration for “Whatever, Heaven Allows,” the latest act of cultural deconstruction (or do I mean demolition?) from the rowdy Radiohole, an experimental theater company that breaks out the beer when it’s time for a toast.
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