Appropriate

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Mr Roxy
#1Appropriate
Posted: 3/11/14 at 6:05pm

Saw it a few nights ago and heartily recommend it

The plot is a familiar one. The head of a family dies and his family comes to the house to resolve all the issues re inheritance. Besides the fact that the play is spot on, the set and physical production for a limited run in a small theater was astounding. The set includes what looks like a mess of books & junk by the lip of the stage. Between acts, the stagehands have to clear all the mess. How they do it was ingenious.

This could easily move to Broadway as it is that good. It is playing at the Pershing Square Signature Center .


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Matt Rogers Profile Photo
Matt Rogers
#2Appropriate
Posted: 3/11/14 at 7:01pm

Physical production is very impressive as you mention but I don't see any way this would ever move to Broadway. I respectfully disagree with you on the show itself. The script is a mishmash of dozens of better plays and I do hope the acting has improved since the first preview.

Mr Roxy Profile Photo
Mr Roxy
#2Appropriate
Posted: 3/11/14 at 7:26pm

From Mrs R

Chacun a son gout

P.S. She speaks French


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Matt Rogers Profile Photo
Matt Rogers
#3Appropriate
Posted: 3/11/14 at 7:27pm

Errrrrrr, okay.

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Mr Roxy
#4Appropriate
Posted: 3/11/14 at 7:29pm

Just joking.

She said what I was going to post - to each his own.


Poster Emeritus

Phyllis Rogers Stone
#5Appropriate
Posted: 3/11/14 at 7:57pm

I'm very sorry your son has gout. Appropriate

ljay889 Profile Photo
ljay889
#6Appropriate
Posted: 3/11/14 at 8:11pm

LOL

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forgetmenotnyc
#7Appropriate
Posted: 3/12/14 at 1:03pm

Saw this on 3/9 & found it to be one of the BEST things I have seen at Signature in a while. Deep, rich, substantial play getting a solid production rich in so many ways. Yeah, it covers storyline we have maybe seen before, but rather than view that as a negative, I prefer to see it as covering something incredibly universal. We all have parents that pass away & leave stuff for the surviving family members to deal with & it is rarely passive or boring. Developed at Sundance Institute & the recipient of the Tennessee Williams award, I recommend this for anyone seeking a good play representing a new young playwright.

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broadwaybelter
#8Appropriate
Posted: 3/16/14 at 10:32pm

Stellar review from Brantley:
NY Times Review 'Appropriate'

playlover2010
#9Appropriate
Posted: 3/16/14 at 10:42pm

Brantley loves it. So did I.

broadfan327
#10Appropriate
Posted: 3/16/14 at 11:05pm

I enjoyed it greatly as well. The themes have been explored before in other plays, but it did not disappoint.

stevenycguy
#11Appropriate
Posted: 3/16/14 at 11:14pm

There is another prior thread that we have. You can use the "SEARCH" function to find it.

https://forum.broadwayworld.com/readmessage.php?thread=1069877

broadwaybelter Profile Photo
broadwaybelter
#12Appropriate
Posted: 3/16/14 at 11:52pm

If you scan the other one, it relates to "previews". And this was already created. Seems relevant to me :)

WiCkEDrOcKS Profile Photo
WiCkEDrOcKS
#13Appropriate
Posted: 3/28/14 at 11:05pm

I saw this and thought it was mostly good, but I couldn't agree more that it rips off other plays that have pulled this type of story off a thousand times better. It is still entertaining and well-performed, but it can't hold a candle to the plays it is obviously...let's just say inspired by. And it throws in one-too-many "shocking" plot revelations for my taste.

My main problem with the writing, however, was that it just all seemed a bit too mean-spirited. At least consistently mean-spirited. A play like AUGUST masterfully manages to control its flux into and then out of the realm of mean-spiritedness, without ever becoming exhausting or having that nastiness be a turn off. Here, it definitely wears its welcome. And it can leave a bit of a bad taste in your mouth. The characters are just all so miserable and mean. Sometimes that can be fun, but for me APPROPRIATE pushed the envelope a bit too far in terms of the tone of the characters and the piece. It got a bit tiring and one-note.

The adult performers could absolutely not have been stronger...I think a lot of the reason I enjoyed myself so much was thanks to these great performers. Sadly I didn't think the kids were too great, though. The set was wonderful and I thought the direction was fantastic. I especially liked the final sequence, which was haunting and really well-done.

You could do a lot worse than APPROPRIATE (in fact, you could do a lot worse in the same building...this is leagues better than KUNG FU and I enjoyed it more than THE OPEN HOUSE) but it just made me wish the piece took a more original approach to the whole "dysfunctional family" theme. It has a certain "been there, done that...more than once...and in better shows" feel about it.

Alex Kulak2
#14Appropriate
Posted: 8/25/19 at 12:58pm

Having read this play, I think it's brilliant. It's a shame it never made it to Broadway. I also think it's really impressive that Branden Jacobs-Jenkins also wrote the play before he was even 30 years old. He's one of the most creative, original voices in the theatre right now and I look forward to every new play he writes.

Anyone think he might make it to Broadway soon?