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Leopoldstadt Broadway Reviews

About the Show

Vienna in 1900 was the most vibrant city in Europe, humming with artistic and intellectual excitement and a genius for enjoying life. A tenth of the population were Jews. A... (more info)

Theatre Longacre Theatre (Broadway)
Previews Sep 14, 2022
Opened Oct 2, 2022
Critics' Rating
8.25 Positive
14 Positive
6 Mixed
0 Negative
Readers' Rating
2.61 Negative
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Critics' Reviews

All that cramming leads to a drama that is, for the most part, cold and clammy until it gains some heat near the end. The writer has jammed politics, innovative devices and the passage of time together before, in plays such as 'Arcadia' and 'Rock n R...

To call this his masterwork may be a bit misleading, it is certainly among his best work, but then he has about 20 best works, including Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, Travesties, The Coast of Utopia and The Real Thing to name a few. Those ar...

9
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LEOPOLDSTADT

From: Talkin' Broadway  |  By: Howard Miller  |  Date: 10/2/2022

If playwright Tom Stoppard stays true to his word and Leopoldstadt turns out to be the last play he writes, it would be a fitting and worthy way to bookend a long and illustrious career dating back to the middle of the last century. As it happens, it...

8
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A Master of the Stage Confronts His Own Ghosts

From: The New York Sun  |  By: A.R. Hoffman  |  Date: 10/2/2022

To be a Jew in 'Leopoldstadt' is unmitigated bad news, an identity to shed in good times and shun in bad ones. Mr. Stoppard's play delivers little of the joy of Jewish life, and plenty of its travails. It is a serious and old-fashioned play, admirabl...

10
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Smartly, Stoppard did not write Leopoldstadt as a Holocaust play. Impending doom lurks in Adam Cork's chilling score, but otherwise, the show is a lively, rich family drama. We're invited into the Merz-Jacobowitzes' commonplace gatherings, debates, t...

10
Thumbs Up

Tom Stoppard’s ‘Leopoldstadt’ on Broadway is simply devastating

From: The Washington Post  |  By: Peter Marks  |  Date: 10/2/2022

I also know from long experience that every Holocaust work ends, spiritually or physically or philosophically, at Auschwitz. But that knowledge - and Stoppard's immersing an audience in a story whose every plot point essentially has been documented b...

Krumholtz and Uranowitz succeed in making Herman and Ludwig's debate in Act 1 absolutely riveting. Stoppard, however, has written Jacob as a one-person screed, and Numrich's over-the-top 'Give me a Tony Award nomination' performance nearly sabotages ...

The set (Richard Hudson, with a shout-out to the props team), costumes (Brigitte Reiffenstuel) and especially the lighting design (Neil Austin) bathe the first scene in an aura of domestic harmony. It's 1899 and almost Christmas in Vienna. Everyone i...

The great playwright Tom Stoppard and his simpatico director Patrick Marber make a lasting gift of remembrance in the brilliant, gorgeous and devastating new play Leopoldstadt, opening tonight at Broadway's Longacre Theatre. But it's a gift that come...

7
Thumbs Sideways

Tom Stoppard Imagines His Family’s Mostly Forgotten Past

From: Vulture  |  By: Naveen Kumar  |  Date: 10/2/2022

Leopoldstadt is the sort of dizzying intellectual panorama for which Stoppard is revered - a chronicle of social movements, theoretical frameworks, and geopolitical catastrophes. (Drink every time someone speaks passionately about the state of the wo...

8
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Review: In Stoppard’s ‘Leopoldstadt,’ a Memorial to a Lost World

From: The New York Times  |  By: Jesse Green  |  Date: 10/2/2022

But 'Leopoldstadt' is not quite as tightly constructed as 'Arcadia,' say, or 'Jumpers' or 'Travesties'; it has too many themes to wrangle, and some dense historical exposition is unconvincingly disguised as small talk. As such, the play leans more th...

Marber's production has enough energy and forward motion to ensure that the emphasis on character does not impede its dramatic intensity. And he helps make it easier to follow (it's not always easy to recall who is related to whom, as the years spin ...

9
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‘Leopoldstadt’ Review: A Jewish Family Through the Eyes of History

From: The Wall Street Journal  |  By: Charles Isherwood  |  Date: 10/2/2022

The theater season is just aborning, but it is virtually inconceivable that it will produce anything superior to Tom Stoppard's 'Leopoldstadt.' An intimate, multigenerational drama about a Jewish family in Vienna, set against the tumultuous first hal...

9
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Stoppard writes with moving power about finding out the truth about oneself while understanding why that truth was obscured for so long. We see how and why people may run from themselves and their identity, but never so far that one is ever completel...

8
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LEOPOLDSTADT

From: Cititour  |  By: Brian Scott Lipton  |  Date: 10/2/2022

When seeing a Tom Stoppard play, one expects to be intellectually dazzled, if not emotionally devastated. That changes with 'Leopoldstadt,' now getting its U.S. premiere at Broadway's Longacre Theatre, which magnificently succeeds at both challenging...

It is, unfortunately, not a very good play. Though intelligently directed by Patrick Marber as a drawing room drama perpetually intruded upon by antisemitism, it manages to say very little during its 2-hour-without-intermission runtime. Stoppard appa...

9
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LEOPOLDSTADT: TOM STOPPARD AT HIS ABSOLUTE, AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL(?) BEST

From: New York Stage Review  |  By: David Finkle  |  Date: 10/2/2022

Director Patrick Marber - a reliable Stoppard collaborator these years - works wonders with his 30-plus cast members (some original London cast players, some new to the piece) as he does with costumer Brigitte Reiffenstuel, lighting designer Neal Aus...

10
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LEOPOLDSTADT: STOPPARD EXAMINES HIS ROOTS, IN EXTRAORDINARY FASHION

From: New York Stage Review  |  By: Steven Suskin  |  Date: 10/2/2022

The performers are uniformly excellent. Uranowitz stands out from beginning (as mathematician Ludwig) to end (as his equally mathematical great-nephew Nathan). Krumholtz is equally adept as the conflicted family breadwinner, while Castelow impresses ...

7
Thumbs Sideways

Leopoldstadt Review. Tom Stoppard on the Jews of Vienna

From: New York Theater  |  By: Jonathan Mandell  |  Date: 10/2/2022

As in his previous work, Stoppard's nineteenth play on Broadway offers dialogue that doubles as intellectual and political discourse. The usual effect of his approach is to make his scripts as rewarding to read on the page as to see acted out on the ...

'Leopoldstadt' is not without its issues. Much of it is expository, slow, and muddled (including a farcical circumcision sequence that somehow got included). It is very challenging to remember who each of the less prominent characters is without cons...

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