The bruschetta like cracker served with the clear wine was spectacular.
Last night I waited for your comments as there are so few here who have seen this incredible piece and therefore able to write about their experience. I fear that this thread might be doomed to fall away.
I am glad to read that you agree with the company and that the new space has only opened up the performance to new opportunities.
"The bruschetta like cracker served with the clear wine was spectacular."
I think your over-enthusiasm went over the top there. I saw the show Saturday night. Yeah, it was a tiny piece of bruschetta. Oooo weeee. The vegetarian burrito I had around the corner at La Gringa was spectacular.
Can someone help me with the location? I am coming in from the suburbs. What is the neighborhood like, and is there a reasonably close subway stop? Any particular safety concerns? I don't know Brooklyn at all.
The neighborhood is the best and no safety concerns. You're only about 2 blocks away from the Grand St L. Let me know if you need some restaurant/bar recommendations in case you're feeling adventurous.
"Pardon my prior Mcfee slip. I know how to spell her name. I just don't know how to type it." -Talulah
I get being enthusiastic, ART, but it was like a small melba toast with a couple of interesting sauces and like a pea or something. Interesting, sure. Related to the show in some unclear way? No doubt. Served during a scene in which it made any kind of sense? Not really. Spectacular? No. But kudos for not calling it "amazing."
As for the neighborhood, Clyde, perhaps you and wonkit have different images that pop into mind when you hear the phrase "the best." Wonkit, it's one of those places that houses communities of color and artsy hipster types. Dollar stores and discount stores and cool restaurants like La Gringa Taqueria. There I saw groups of Latinos and a bunch of death metal kids. "Then She Fell" is a two minute walk down Grand Street (from which you make one left and one right) from the Grand Street stop on the L line. There was a totally mellow vibe in the neighborhood and the Williamsburg Housing Projects are directly across the street from the theater space on Maujer Street. Like I said, the atmosphere seemed mellow, but I'm a dude who never feels uncomfortable walking anywhere. And kudos to you, Clyde, for not adding an animated GIF to your reply.
We are all entitled to our opinion. I thought the bruschetta delicious. As to the "drink me" and "eat me"s throughout, Then She Fell... it was clear to me.
I know this is an old thread, but I'm curious to know if anyone has seen it more than once? I'm going for my second time, and trying to figure out how experiences differ. If each audience member/group is on their own track, I wonder how to make sure you don't end up in the same track as the last time? Feel free to PM me if you want to avoid spoilers!
"Artists are always on the vanguard of change: they give the community a vision."
"Desire comes from the Latin "de sire", or "of the father", or "of the stars". We want what is magical, what is out there, what is of the stars. And so our characters should as well."
"If there are people who don't believe in you, don't hang out with them. Wish them well, wish them peace, and move on."
Don't sit in the same seat you sat in during the "Entrance Lecture". The Nurses take people according to which seats they are sitting in. I did not get to join the Tea Party, but was able to witness Alice pass through the looking glass.
Those Blocked: SueStorm. N2N Nate. Good riddence to stupid! Rad-Z, shill begone!
Sad that there is so little chatter about THEN SHE FELL on BWW. If there had been more, maybe we would have been warned away from wasting 2 hours at THE WORST SHOW WE'VE SEEN IN NY IN A DECADE! (imho) So here's our space to rant, and to try to add counter-ballast to the unanimous raves we've seen elsewhere on this thread.
As huge fans of SLEEP NO MORE (seen twice), we found the asylum setting wholly derivative of the 5th floor at the McKittrick, but done with far less space and far far less wit or artistry. We hated being locked in unimaginative room after room waiting interminable minutes for scenes to commence without any chance to move on when the boredom grew too much to bear. We hated the faux intimacy promised by those vaunted one-on-ones. We hated the drearily repetitive pas-de-deux's between performers (again far less acrobatic, emotionally fraught or inventive than similar scenes at SNM).
Most of all we hated the unfairness of the various spectator tracks: when the 2 of us compared scenes on the walk back to the L-train, we discovered we had each witnessed 5 or 6 sequences not seen by the other. I missed out on painting the roses red, or a chess game with the asylum director. He missed out on the doll closet and hair-brushing bits. Most galling, my partner never saw the Tea Party (the only truly entertaining sequence I enjoyed all night), while I never saw the water-flooded room (the only design space he thought worth seeing).
Unfathomable to us that 2 hours couldn't be structured to allow all 15 spectators to move through all 20 or 25 spaces at least once. Also unfathomable to us is the lack of ANY online criticism of this show (putting aside the critiques of the bruschetta). This wasn't just a weak show for us. This was a disaster beyond all reckoning and we can't understand how no-one else is pointing out that this Emperor is siting in that asylum stark naked.
So it's the fault of others that you chose to go? Is this the first time the advice you've taken from others has disappointed you? I don't know if the edge of righteousness in your post is intended or not, but I hope you feel better now.
Everybody is entitled to her opinion, I personally didn't like it anywhere near as much as Sleep No More NYC, which in turn I didn't like as much as the Boston version.
If there had been more, maybe we would have been warned away from wasting 2 hours at THE WORST SHOW WE'VE SEEN IN NY IN A DECADE! (imho)
It is not without its flaws, but far from being the worst show in NYC in over a decade. I can easily quote a hundred shows or more that are more deserving of the title.
You start by saying you are a Sleep No More fan. You obviously had similar expectations and that translated into a disappointing experience.
I found the performance aspect of Then She Fell more satisfying than the Punchdrunk show.
Listen, I don't take my clothes off for anyone, even if it is "artistic". - JANICE
"So it's the fault of others that you chose to go?"
No Namo, certainly not anyone else's fault. And I apologize for the edge of righteousness you spotted in my post -- not my intention to be righteous at all. Hoping to be helpful to others considering seeing Then She Fell for a contrary view. Also we were certainly frustrated at not getting to see all the scenes on display. (Sort of like the old Borscht belt complaint-- the food was dreadful and the portions were so small!)
And blaxx, not to be pedantic, but there may well be many many worse shows in a decade in New York than this one. We ourselves just didn't happen to see them.
It's funny, I look back at the posts and see that mine were about ratcheting down the over-enthuasiam just a tad. Spectacular crackers and the best neighborhood and all that.
In my real life I am glad I saw The She Fell, mostly because I thought the Lewis Carroll guy was a total dream. Actually, that's not the only reason. But if anybody asks me if they *need* to see it I tell them the only people who need to see are those who love Alice In Wonderland (I mean, crazy for it) and haven't seen Sleep No More.
I recently brought my niece to Sleep No More. She happens to love Alice in Wonderland and once played the Red Queen, but budget and time constraints meant we had to pick one. SNM was the no-brainer, more bang for the buck.
But I think of Then She Fell as a different kind of achievement. I hadn't really thought about how my mind wandered during the times when I was left alone waiting for a character to come in. You're right that it could be more streamlined. But believe me, if you didn't like hanging out and waiting for something to happen, there really is nothing special about painting the rose. I liked the way it came together. I liked the reveals toward the end.
I too would have hated it if I didn't get the tea party scene.