EXIT THE KING Reviews

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BustopherPhantom
#25re: EXIT THE KING Reviews
Posted: 3/26/09 at 8:51pm

The Wall Street Journal is Positive:

"Only two weak links mar this sterling revival. The first one, I'm sorry to say, is Ms. Sarandon, whose acting is flat and uninteresting. The second is the translation, a new English-language version by Messrs. Armfield and Rush that has been modernized, vulgarized and generally tarted up. It works, I guess, but I doubt that Ionesco would have approved of the cheaper jokes. On the other hand, I'm sure that he would have relished the rest of this production, whose rip-snorting vitality makes his vision of the dark at the end of the tunnel a bit easier to take -- if not to accept. See it by all means, but don't expect to go home grinning."

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123810250214351659.html


"Y'know, I think Bertolt Brecht was rolling in his grave."
-Nellie McKay on the 2006 Broadway production of The Threepenny Opera, in which she played Polly Peachum

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BustopherPhantom
#26re: EXIT THE KING Reviews
Posted: 3/26/09 at 8:57pm

USA Today gives the show 3 1/2 Stars out of 4:

"This production, which opened Thursday at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre, features a new adaptation by director Neil Armfield and leading man Geoffrey Rush; Susan Sarandon co-stars as Queen Marguerite. Rush and Armfield have preserved the play's piquance while making its humor and soulfulness accessible to audience members who might not have rushed to see Ionesco done by lesser-known actors.

Reflecting on Berenger's record of oppression and mass murder, his loyal guard notes that executions were carried out "for national security." When the king tries to compel his distraught second wife, Queen Marie, to move toward him and she is literally paralyzed by his powerlessness, he demands, "Do Irish dancing. You don't need your arms!""

http://www.usatoday.com/life/theater/reviews/2009-03-26-exittheking_N.htm


"Y'know, I think Bertolt Brecht was rolling in his grave."
-Nellie McKay on the 2006 Broadway production of The Threepenny Opera, in which she played Polly Peachum

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Lamc16
#27re: EXIT THE KING Reviews
Posted: 3/26/09 at 9:20pm

Play Esq., I saw Brantley at Tuesday night's performance.


"You've gotta have a swine to show you where the truffles are."

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James2
#28re: EXIT THE KING Reviews
Posted: 3/26/09 at 9:25pm

The Word of Mouth panelists all really enjoyed Rush and Co., and while they all agreed that the play is for certain tastes, their degree of enjoyment varied from person to person.

http://www.broadway.com/Broadway-com-VIDEO-ON-DEMAND-Word-Of-Mouth-Reviews/broadway_information_html/5015935


My avatar = A screencap from Avatar, arguably the greatest animated show of all

scaryclowns2232
#29re: EXIT THE KING Reviews
Posted: 3/26/09 at 9:47pm

Word of Mouth basically didn't understand the play.

My favorite quote: "I didn't like Exit the King very well."

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James2
#30re: EXIT THE KING Reviews
Posted: 3/26/09 at 10:08pm

Talkin Broadway is a Rave (he even likes Sarandon)

Opening paragraph:
"You?ve undoubtedly heard that your life flashes before your eyes when you die. Well, no one?s lived a greater life or faced brighter and more prolonged flashing in his terminal moments than King Berenger I, the ruler of creation and assorted environs. But despite governing the establishment of establishment and literally everything else under the sun, His Majesty has probably never seen the last chapter of his own story, written by Eugene Ionesco and titled Exit the King, portrayed with the tenacity, insanity, and astringent poignancy brought to it by the haunting new revival that just opened at the Barrymore."

Closing sentence:
"If you have to go, go out with a bang, and few shows right now bang louder than this Exit the King."

http://www.talkinbroadway.com/world/index.html


My avatar = A screencap from Avatar, arguably the greatest animated show of all

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BustopherPhantom
#31re: EXIT THE KING Reviews
Posted: 3/26/09 at 10:19pm

Brantley looks good:

"Never mind those scary figures of legend who kept on fighting with bullets, poisons and knives in their guts. When it comes to refusing to shuffle off the old mortal coil, these men are all small time compared to his moribund majesty King Berenger, whose last hours on earth have been brought to life like a fire-trailing comet by Geoffrey Rush. Let me add that in the title role of Eugène Ionesco?s ?Exit the King,? which opened at the Ethel Barrymore Theater in Neil Armfield?s brutally funny revival, Mr. Rush is not only more entertaining than the usual never-say-die bogeyman but also more frightening. That?s not because you?re worried that the 400-year-old Berenger might come after you in your dreams, Freddy Krueger style; it?s because you know that the seedy, power-addled egomaniac onstage ? who?s working overtime to dodge his own mortality ? is, quite simply, you."

http://theater2.nytimes.com/gst/theater/tdetails.html?id=1231545255445&scp=3&sq=Exit%20the%20King&st=cse


"Y'know, I think Bertolt Brecht was rolling in his grave."
-Nellie McKay on the 2006 Broadway production of The Threepenny Opera, in which she played Polly Peachum

James2 Profile Photo
James2
#31re: EXIT THE KING Reviews
Posted: 3/26/09 at 11:33pm

BB's full review is up, and it's a rave:

"Every performance evokes a different style ? from the superb Ms. Martin?s addled, ratlike servant to the American dude-ishness of Mr. Hutchison?s soldier and the sideshow hucksterism of Mr. Sadler?s doctor. Yet somehow the disparities work, feeding our sense of the loneliness implicit in the very idea of individuality. Ms. Ambrose?s overripe emotionalism as the young queen who still loves her husband is the perfect counterpoint to the acerbic pragmatism in Ms. Sarandon?s sustained coolness (an approach that pays off in Marguerite?s overlong concluding monologue).

Mr. Rush?s ecstatically mannered performance, which uses every old trouper trick in the trunk, at first makes you think of the venerable actor-managers of yore, like Donald Wolfit. But as he struts and frets his two hours on the stage, which include a hilariously spastic promenade, he seems to shed his skin along with the king?s accouterments.

Watching him is like staring at one of Goya?s more savage caricatures. At first you?re amused, fascinated and repelled. But the longer you look, the more human the image becomes until finally, you realize with a shudder, it has turned into a mirror."

http://theater2.nytimes.com/2009/03/27/theater/reviews/27ione.html


My avatar = A screencap from Avatar, arguably the greatest animated show of all

autopilot2
#32re: EXIT THE KING Reviews
Posted: 3/27/09 at 1:14am

Big congrats to Neil and Geoffery from an Aussie fan.

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insertclevernamehere
#33re: EXIT THE KING Reviews
Posted: 3/27/09 at 1:17am

I think Barbara from World of Mouth is drunk again. It's beginning to be a habit.


Oh, and I almost forgot to mention...I'm the good cop, he's the bad cop.
Updated On: 3/27/09 at 01:17 AM

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insertclevernamehere
#34re: EXIT THE KING Reviews
Posted: 3/27/09 at 1:17am

Edit: Double post of doom


Oh, and I almost forgot to mention...I'm the good cop, he's the bad cop.
Updated On: 3/27/09 at 01:17 AM

James2 Profile Photo
James2
#35re: EXIT THE KING Reviews
Posted: 3/27/09 at 1:19am

Entertainment Weekly gives it a B+

"The cast is uniformly strong, but this is Rush's show. He commands the stage from the opening to his final spotlighted death throes, toggling easily between tragedy and comedy, not to mention between high comedy and low. At one point, he collapses with his back bent over a stool, precariously close to toppling onto his head, and then struggles to roll his royal scepter down his legs to his feet so that its weight will tip him upright again. It's a small bit of mime, wonderfully executed ? not only does it grab your attention, it also remains absolutely true to the character of this wobbly, impossibly vain monarch. Of such small moments are great performances are made."

http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,20267836,00.html


My avatar = A screencap from Avatar, arguably the greatest animated show of all

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muscle23ftl
#36re: EXIT THE KING Reviews
Posted: 3/27/09 at 5:08am

So should we say that this play got rave reviews across the board?


"People have their opinions and that doesn't mean that their opinions are wrong or right. I just take it with a grain of salt because opinions are like as*holes, everyone has one". -Felicia Finley-

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Smaxie
#37re: EXIT THE KING Reviews
Posted: 3/27/09 at 6:46am

Certainly positive reviews across the board, with raves for Rush. Some of the reviews have a few qualifications though - either issues with the play or with some of the performances, but not with Rush, who seems clearly bound for a Tony Award.

From some of the other major dailies this morning...

New York Post is Positive, three stars out of four, rave for Rush, with reservations about direction, Ambrose and Sarandon.

http://www.nypost.com/seven/03272009/entertainment/theater/its_rush_hour__161527.htm

Daily News is Positive, three stars out of five, rave for Rush and for Act One, with some issues about Sarandon and the adaptation.

http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/arts/2009/03/27/2009-03-27_oh_what_a_rush_geoffrey_rush_takes_broad.html

Newsday is Very Positive, calling it "inspired," with praise for everything except Sarandon.

http://www.newsday.com/services/newspaper/printedition/friday/partii/ny-etthelede6083305mar27,0,506895.story


Begin at the beginning and go on till you come to the end: then stop.
Updated On: 3/27/09 at 06:46 AM

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tazber
#38re: EXIT THE KING Reviews
Posted: 3/27/09 at 8:36am

"Pathetic..."

"What a dick. Just let him post his little thread, why does it bother you? Oh right, because you're a nasty, sniping theatre bitch."

re: EXIT THE KING Reviews


....but the world goes 'round

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boyfromoz2
#39re: EXIT THE KING Reviews
Posted: 3/27/09 at 9:02am

Snaps for Geoff :)

Saw the show in it's original production in Sydney in 2007 and knew it was bound for bigger things. So glad to hear the Broadway transfer has been received with open arms :)

RentBoy86
#40re: EXIT THE KING Reviews
Posted: 3/27/09 at 11:27am

Hope it's a hit!

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Claire De Loone
#41re: EXIT THE KING Reviews
Posted: 3/27/09 at 11:54am

Ditto Boyfromoz nice to see a Company B production go all the way :)


"Of course, sometimes I get carried away"

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ray-andallthatjazz86
#42re: EXIT THE KING Reviews
Posted: 3/27/09 at 12:36pm

Wow, Brantley's review was a love letter to the play itself. It's one of his most interesting reviews. I love the fact that he didn't just review the play but he analyzed the adaptation. Really neat.
Congrats to all involved, it's a fascinating play, with great performances across the board, and Rush is just too good for words.


"Some people can thrive and bloom living life in a living room, that's perfect for some people of one hundred and five. But I at least gotta try, when I think of all the sights that I gotta see, all the places I gotta play, all the things that I gotta be at"

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WiCkEDrOcKS
#43re: EXIT THE KING Reviews
Posted: 3/27/09 at 1:36pm

Barbara is the best panelist on WORD OF MOUTH. Just because she's a nut. And seems like she knows it.

I don't think she was drunk again, but nothing beats the GUYS AND DOLLS review. She was wasted and it was hilarious.
Updated On: 3/27/09 at 01:36 PM

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Wanna Be A Foster
#44re: EXIT THE KING Reviews
Posted: 4/3/09 at 7:18pm

The Village Voice is Mixed-Negative:

Thanks to this intellectual sturdiness, the play will even survive the brash, noisy mess that Neil Armfield's production has made of it, abetted by star and co-translator Geoffrey Rush, who's way too busy chewing scenery to give the title role any cohesive life. Everyone else merely shouts, except for Susan Sarandon, woefully miscast and worse misdirected, who seems to be looking for an alternative style, or possibly a different play.
Village Voice Review - Exit The King


"Winning a Tony this year is like winning Best Attendance in third grade: no one will care but the winner and their mom."
-Kad

"I have also met him in person, and I find him to be quite funny actually. Arrogant and often misinformed, but still funny."
-bjh2114 (on Michael Riedel)

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EugLoven
#45re: EXIT THE KING Reviews
Posted: 4/18/09 at 1:38am

Finally saw it tonight. It was definitely odd and bizarre (Ionesco, who knew?) I can't say I loved it. Can't even say I particularly liked it. I just... saw it. Glad I did, because I like to see everything on the boards and have an informed opinion.

Rush's performance was polished and grandiose. I was entertained with how physical he was with his comedy. He really owned that stage (and paced it well). Sarandon, I love, but if I may say so, I couldn't help thinking any other classy earthy rough-voiced white actress could have played the part.

Lauren Ambrose is so gorgeous. Seriously.

I found myself feeling badly for Brian Hutchinson because I've seen him in such exceptional NYC roles (Oh the Humanity! and From Up Here)... and he had to stand ALL night in knight's uniform acting like a village-idiot. Great actor, not so great role. And he had to shave his head!!! He must miss those beautiful blond-locks.

Andrea Martin was just as whacky as ever.

As they left, the Upper East Siders (the general term I give any rich white NYers in a Bway house) were saying: "It was really good but I didn't understand any of it."

It was very very well-acted, and of course I'm aware that Ionesco's writing holds multiple meanings and multiple interpretations. I also like to think I'm pretty well-read and educated in many aspects of theatre (on-stage and in the house), and yet, I didn't terribly enjoy myself. The "death" sequence was lulling my neighbors to sleep... But I was more steadfast than that, determined to make it through the entire evening without having to convince myself this was good theatre.

Then again, it was a Friday night... Maybe we were all just a little too tired.

But on the whole, I was more entertained by sharing the bathroom with Michael C. Hall (aka "Dexter") who was in the audience... and yes he washed his hands.
Updated On: 4/18/09 at 01:38 AM

RentBoy86
#46re: EXIT THE KING Reviews
Posted: 4/18/09 at 1:51am

No way! Brian Hutchinson has a great role! He's one of the funniest up there! I thought he played the part perfectly. It's not a pointless role. It's Ionesco, everything has a purpose.

I really want to rush this show and see it from the front row. I just thought it was genius. It's def. a love it or hate type play. A lot of ppl around me just didn't dig the whole absurdist vibe, which is cool. I did, so I liked it. I think Rush deserves the Tony, and I don't know who his competition would be?

Mr Smith
#47re: EXIT THE KING Reviews
Posted: 5/10/15 at 7:42pm

Just wondering what people thought of the show and Mr Rush when they saw it. And yes I know its long closed

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TalkinLoud
#48re: EXIT THE KING Reviews
Posted: 5/15/15 at 9:15am

I saw this production twice and adored it. It made the material so accessible without dumbing it down at all. Very funny. Geoffrey Rush was utterly brilliant.