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- THEATER, Page 67THE BEST OF 1992
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- 1. The Kentucky Cycle
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- These nine plays spanning seven hours -- and two centuries
- -- aspire to nothing less than a history of America, mythic in
- scale yet humbly rooted in the evolving fate of the same few
- hundred acres of Kentucky. Playwright Robert Schenkkan proves a
- spectacularly vivid revisionist, underscoring the violence,
- exploitation, multiracial antagonism and unchecked injustice of
- our past. Produced at Seattle's Intiman Theater and Los
- Angeles' Mark Taper Forum, this was the first Pulitzer Prize
- drama not seen in New York City and is thus a triumph for all
- regional theater.
-
- 2. Conversations with My Father
-
- His pal Bob Fosse gave Herb Gardner the nickname Whimsy.
- But Gardner, 58, reveals a far deeper writer in this story of
- a Jewish barkeep in Lower Manhattan who is sure that success
- will come from assimilation, endless self-reinvention and
- unstinting faith in the American Dream. The tale, narrated by
- a once rebellious son who is now himself a rebelled-against
- father, came from Seattle Repertory Theater to Broadway.
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- 3. The Destiny of Me
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- Larry Kramer earned an Oscar nomination for his 1969
- screenplay Women in Love, then co-founded Gay Men's Health
- Crisis and the radical Act Up. Onstage, he retold his life in
- The Normal Heart (1985) and resumed it in this off-Broadway
- stunner. Jonathan Hadary gave the performance of the year,
- balancing titanic rage, puckish mockery and suppressed
- self-pity.
-
- 4. Angels in America
-
- Towering over Tony Kushner's 7 1/2-hour epic about gay
- liberation, AIDS and the Reagan era was a wall like the facade
- of some government colossus, already cracked and waiting to
- split open. It did -- to reveal an avenging angel that was just
- one of the acts of theatrical and metaphysical daring in this
- brilliant if roughhewn jumble of politics, fantasy and farce.
- The full Angels debuted memorably at Los Angeles' Mark Taper
- Forum, starring Ron Leibman as Republican dealmaker Roy Cohn.
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- 5. Spic-O-Rama
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- John Leguizamo gave himself an acting tour de force as all
- six members of a troubled Hispanic family, from nerdy schoolboy
- Miggy to bone-dumb Desert Storm veteran Crazy Willie to their
- amiably lowlife mother Gladyz, in hilarious monologues that
- moved beyond performance art to become a true and deeply moving
- play. The production by Chicago's Goodman Theater transferred to
- off-Broadway.
-
- 6. Guys and Dolls
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- The greatest of Broadway musicals was exuberantly revived
- there as a color-drenched, clownish yet passionate paean to a
- big-city zest and vitality that no longer exist, and probably
- never did. Faith Prince's Miss Adelaide was the year's musical
- highlight.
-
- 7. Jake's Women
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- Alan Alda's unsinkable niceness tempered Neil Simon's
- unyielding self-criticism in a surprisingly funny and engrossing
- play about a writer who prefers to deal with people as
- characters inside his head, so he can summon, alter or dismiss
- them at will.
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- 8. Oleanna
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- Liberals think it's about sexual harassment. Conservatives
- are sure it's about intellectual terrorism. Even Playbill
- splits the difference: half the front covers put a bull's-eye
- on the haughty college professor, the other half on his dim,
- dogmatic female student. Playwright David Mamet's off-Broadway
- zinger holds a mirror up to muddled modern life.
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- 9. Two Shakespearean Actors
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- Richard Nelson's quasi-historical piece about competing
- 19th century acting troupes, one led by a Briton and the other
- by an American, had moody staging by Jack O'Brien, three superb
- performances (by Brian Bedford, Victor Garber and Zjelko
- Ivanek) and an unjustly brief life on Broadway.
-
- 10. Inspecting Carol
-
- With a plot from Gogol and a play-within-a-play fiasco as
- funny as in Nicholas Nickleby, artistic director Daniel Sullivan
- and the actors of Seattle Repertory Theater hilariously send up
- censorship controversies, the regional-theater movement's fear
- of the National Endowment for the Arts and the widespread,
- pathetic dependence on A Christmas Carol as a holiday cash cow.
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-
- . . . AND THE WORST
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- Crazy for You
-
- The Tony winner for Best Musical was a dull
- disappointment, hitching beloved Gershwin songs and sprightly
- choreography to a slow narrative, undefined characters and blah
- performances. It reveled in the adolescence that the American
- musical outgrew.
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