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Patriots Broadway Reviews

About the Show

In 1991, after the fall of the Soviet Union, the new Russia belongs to its oligarchs—and no one is more powerful than billionaire Boris Berezovsky. When an eventual successor to... (more info)

Theatre Ethel Barrymore Theatre (Broadway)
Previews Apr 1, 2024
Opened Apr 22, 2024
Critics' Rating
6.73 Mixed
2 Positive
9 Mixed
0 Negative
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Critics' Reviews

7
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‘Patriots’ Review: What Happened to the Man Who Made Putin?

From: New York Times  |  By: Jesse Green  |  Date: 4/22/2024

But then “Patriots” is no better a source for moral news than the other kind. Perhaps no play is. Here, though, Putin is given way more than his due: glamorized as a shy, upstanding mayor corrupted by Berezovsky and his plutocratic ilk. Whereas B...

7
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Patriots

From: Deadline  |  By: Greg Evans  |  Date: 4/22/2024

As good as Stuhlbarg and Keen are – and they’re very good, as are Luke Thallon as oligarch-turned-Putin puppet Roman Abramovic and Alex Hurt as Berezovsky’s doomed security man – Patriots never fully conveys the emotional vitality or grand dr...

In a Broadway season filled with big performances, there’s none bigger or busier than Michael Stuhlbarg’s portrayal of Berezovsky. He leaves no gesture, no inflection, no dance step unexplored. Berezovsky was a child prodigy, but rather than taki...

Morgan’s characters explain themselves at times like they are walking Wikipedia entries. As with “The Crown,” these histories always run the risk of making people think they are watching historical fact, not a dramatic rendition with imagined d...

6
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On Broadway, Vladimir Putin remains an enigma

From: Washington Post  |  By: Naveen Kumar  |  Date: 4/22/2024

It proves tough territory to conquer, despite the Sturm und Drang of this staging by Almeida artistic director Rupert Goold (Netflix, a co-producer on the show, is reportedly developing a screen adaptation). Morgan’s choice to focus on Berezovsky, ...

7
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'Patriots' review — Russian history goes from the world stage to the Broadway stage

From: New York Theatre Guide  |  By: Kyle Turner  |  Date: 4/22/2024

It’s curious that Morgan depicts Putin as a man whose ambitions and cunning stays under wraps, Keen playing him with smaller gestures opposite Stuhlbarg’s heavily gesticulatory performance. But here, rather than a man who’s biding his time to g...

5
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PATRIOTS Has No Flag to Raise — Review

From: Theatrely  |  By: Juan A. Ramirez  |  Date: 4/22/2024

Rupert Goold directs with a coach’s jingoism, an approach which moves things along quickly, sometimes loudly, and makes the most of Miriam Buether’s set: a palatial office cutting across a long, posh bar and flanked by raised balconies pegged to ...

8
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PATRIOTS: RUSSIAN HISTORY RENDERED WITH SHAKESPEAREAN THEATRICALITY

From: New York Stage Review  |  By: Frank Scheck  |  Date: 4/22/2024

But throughout the play’s lengthy running time, Morgan delivers the sort of brilliantly observed characterizations at which he excels. In Stuhlbarg’s wildly entertaining, outsized performance, Berezovsky emerges a man who deeply loves both his co...

8
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PATRIOTS: A STARTLING AUTOCRAT-OLIGARCH EXPOSÉ

From: New York Stage Review  |  By: David Finkle  |  Date: 4/22/2024

Pulling all this together — with Jack Knowles’ dramatic lighting, Adam Cork’s sound and original music, and Ash J. Woodward’s striking video design — is Rupert Goold. Ever since he startled Manhattan audiences with his 2008 Macbeth, he has ...

6
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Patriots Broadway Review

From: New York Theater  |  By: Jonathan Mandell  |  Date: 4/22/2024

“Patriots” ultimately feels like a play for a different time and a different place. It is opening at the crowded end of a busy Broadway season, and if New York theatergoers are going to be offered a play about Russia that involves Vladimir Putin,...

There’s an expectation that in Morgan’s latest merging of historic fact and fiction that the writer of “The Crown” on TV, “The Audience” on stage and “The Queen” on film will once again provide an intimate and revealing look behind an...

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