Fairly absorbing in content, Hall's patchy drama about plain blokes transformed by art is somewhat by-the-numbers in its episodic construction, complete with a comedy scene involving a nude model (Lisa McGrillis). If the story at times is predictable...
Critics' Reviews
'The Pitmen Painters' Digs Into Art
Cherry Jones Sails Through Mrs. Warren's Profession; Lee Hall Mines The Pitmen Painters
Touching predictable bases, Hall tells his story jumpily, as if more anxious to declare his sentimental allegiance for the old-left dogmas inherent in it than to make it dramatically pertinent today. Despite the glibly drawn characters, the all-Engli...
The Pitmen Painters is the sort of play that the British turn out regularly, but that has trouble getting arrested on these shores: a straightforward, almost artless docudrama, grounded in true-life events and contemporary issues, wearing its sociopo...
Brits on Broadway: Children and Art
In Pitmen, the characters, as written by Lee Hall (who knows of what he mines, having also written Billy Elliot), are mostly just mouthpieces, and Mr. Hall's writing is simplistic, often hokey.
The Pitmen Painters: Don't Quit Your Day Job
Even if the story of a chance to elevate one's self from a dangerous, working-class life through art sounds a bit too much like Billy Elliot, Hall's other current Broadway offering, The Pitmen Painters is a far superior piece with a strong emotional...
Two British Plays Put Society In The Spotlight
Suffice to say that Shaw, this ain't. Hall fairly bludgeons us with his populist message, and the characters can border on cartoonish in their conformity to broad, familiar stereotypes. Still, the actors are game and adroit; standouts include Michael...
Some liberties are taken by Hall in telling his story. The initially unsophisticated miners are in virtually no time well versed in artistic parlance and technically proficient with the paint brush. Such poetic license in telling a story that spans s...
There is a lot of high-minded talk throughout the play — is art an elitist pursuit or truly for the masses? — but it yields little in terms of dramatic tension or surprise. And for such a fundamentally didactic show, the takeaway seems rather sim...
'The Pitmen Painters' on Broadway
The work, which began at the same area's Live Theatre in 2007 and became a London hit with the original actors and company director Max Roberts, has come to Broadway to tell another inspirational story and to be one. At least, that is the script with...
Broadway's Fine British Imports: 'Brief Encounter,' 'Pitmen Painters'
How they come to express themselves on canvas at the urging of a local art professor (Ian Kelly) is a livelier dramatic springboard than what happens after their work is discovered by the press and some wealthy patrons. So the first half of this enjo...
Tough Miners Morph Into Brainy ‘Pitmen Painters’
The language can suddenly switch from country bumpkin to a level of sophistication well beyond the credible, as when Harry, a Marxist, says one moment, “Nebody’s deing what we de”; at the next, “This is just the start. This place’ll be an a...
Stoking a Fiery Passion for Art
Oliver's scenes with Lyon and Helen tremble with a yearning and awkwardness, infused with a crippling class consciousness and a subliminal eroticism that dare not identify itself. In those moments 'The Pitmen Painters' stops being an 'on the one hand...
They Can't Dance (So Don't Ask)
You may have guessed that I didn't expect to like 'The Pitmen Painters,' which by all rights should have been ludicrously heavy-handed. Sometimes it is, but more often Mr. Hall has rung fresh changes on his familiar formulas, and the result is a sati...
The Art-Appreciation Lectures of The Pitmen Painters
It’s the individual personalities who sparkle here, and make Pitmen more than just a good-hearted, Geordie-accented lecture series. Christopher Connel turns in a deceptively modest performance as Oliver Kilbourn, the group member most torn between...
There’s another dimension to this story that adds to the 'Pitmen' lore. All eight actors in the show hail from the same mining region where the play is set. And they've stayed with it since the play debuted there three years ago. And each of these ...
A British Play Mines Working-Class Heroes For Inspiration
The play is less mawkish than its premise might suggest. Hall, who delved into related terrain in Billy Elliot, does not overly sentimentalize the working-class men at the core of his story (even if, as in Billy Elliot, he takes a few cheap shots at ...
It is truly our good fortune that the entire original English cast has traveled with the Max Roberts’ detailed production to Broadway. They are all individually excellent and make for a fiery and passionate ensemble.
Here it is, only the beginning of a new theater season, and Broadway already has a feel-good -- make that a feel-great -- hit in 'The Pitmen Painters.' Scribe Lee Hall draws on the same inspirational themes that served him so well in 'Billy Elliot th...
Painting Coal Diggers Offer Stellar Prequel To 'Billy Elliot'
There are uniformly stellar performances from the terrific cast, who reprise roles for Manhattan Theatre Club that they played in 2007 in Newcastle and a subsequent run at London's National Theatre. Director Max Roberts' assured staging is crisp and ...
Lee Hall's 'The Pitmen Painters' is a bit like the art made by its characters: Whatever it lacks in technique it more than makes up for in expression. If the characters are sometimes too predictable and the sentiment a bit thick, that doesn't prevent...
'The Pitmen Painters' Mixes Art and Miners
'The Pitmen Painters' comes to New York after a rapturous reception in England and high expectations here because of its playwright. It may not be 'Billy Elliot,' but, in it's own way, it dances.
Learning how to paint is mine-altering
Still, Hall gets enough right, and by the end, it's practically impossible not to root for 'The Pitmen Painters' -- both the show and the characters.
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