News on your favorite shows, specials & more!

Monsoon Wedding Off-Broadway Reviews

Reviews of Monsoon Wedding on Broadway. See what all the critics had to say and see all the ratings for Monsoon Wedding including the New York Times and More...

CRITICS RATING:
6.00
READERS RATING:
None Yet

Rate Monsoon Wedding


Critics' Reviews

7

Review: In ‘Monsoon Wedding,’ an Arranged Marriage of Musical Styles

From: The New York Times | By: Jesse Green | Date: 05/23/2023

Otherwise, the musicalization feels both too assertive and too inconclusive, like a parade passing by. (There are rarely buttons on the songs to tell you they’re done, leaving the audience wondering whether to applaud.) Only in one song is there a concerted approach to the dramatic experience. The song involves Aditi’s orphaned cousin Ria, raised with her as a sister. Serious and studious, Ria (Sharvari Deshpande) plans to attend New York University, mostly as a way of escaping the marital expectations that Aditi, a pampered princess — “even your panties are ironed” — is all too willing to meet.

6

'Monsoon Wedding' the musical is not quite yet a happy marriagef

From: The Washington Post | By: Peter Marks | Date: 05/23/2023

It’s lovely to look at, courtesy of David Bengali’s virtuosic video wall and Arjun Bhasin’s gorgeous costumes. Vishal Bhardwaj’s melodies are consistently sprightly, and the show boasts some appealing performances, especially in Salena Qureshi’s Aditi and Deven Kolluri as her banker husband-to-be, Hemant, from Hoboken, N.J. Still, there’s something pat about the whole enterprise, redolent of the canned characters and contrived plot twists of a vintage family TV comedy, that stops 'Monsoon Wedding' short of specialness.

5

Review: ‘Monsoon Wedding’ Is a Hit Film, but Not a Great Musical

From: The Daily Beast | By: Tim Teeman | Date: 05/23/2023

The families mingle and bustle, but-without camera close-ups and cuts-it all feels stiff and belabored on stage. There is no sense of high-stakes, or even low-stakes for Aditi, Hemant, or their families; no narrative grist around them making this decision for a set of truly convincing reasons, or asking what they really want. Theirs is a woefully under-conceived central relationship to base a musical around. When they sing the duet “Could You Have Loved Me” it rings not just implausible but pointless; they never seemed that into each other. There is no yearning or mystery or intrigue. They seem pretty dullsville as a couple.

Videos


TICKET CENTRAL

Recommended For You