Member Name: |
Valle6 |
Contact User: |
You must be logged in to contact BWW members.
|
|
Most Recent Message Board Posts:
View Off Topic Posts
Daddy Issues Reviews Oct 20
2016, 05:23:53 PM
Hateaerobics....Who are you the thread police?
I am simply trying to spread the word about a wonderful off Broadway show that should be checked out. I don't understand the snark or the negativity on here. Oh thats right our name is hate aerobics.
|
Daddy Issues Reviews Oct 20
2016, 05:13:30 PM
And another good one. Review: The joys and disappointments of parenting in “Daddy Issues” Asys Danilova NEW YORK NY - Meet Donald Moscowitz (Matt Koplik), an aspiring actor rehearsing a line for a cat food commercial in his cantaloupe-painted apartment. Meet his dad, Sid Moscowitz, trying to persuade his only child to abandon his unpromising acting career and homosexual life style for what seems like the 50th time. Donald spontaneously produces a lie to shut up his father’s whining and threats; he says that he has a 10-year-old son with his ex-girlfriend from the college musical-theater club. Mama, Marion Moskowitz (Kate Katcher) and Grandma Moskowitz quickly emerge in the apartment with gifts and screams of excitement.
Now Donald and his sidekick friends, Levi Krauss (Shua Potter) and Henrietta Hudson (Elisabeth Klein), need to come up with a plan to find a boy to play his son and a woman to play Mary Ellen, the mother. Henrietta promotes herself from casting intern to casting director and quickly finds a star for the domestic show – 10-year-old Jonny Walker (Alex Ammerman), living with his alcoholic mother in the same building. Casting for the part of the Marry Ellen takes longer as both finalists (and the only contestants), Levi and Henrietta, are very persuasive as Donald’s college lover.
Daddy Issues, written by Marshal Goldberg and directed by David Goldyn is a sitcom in the theater. If you are hungry for the genre and nostalgic for 90s television – you will have a blast. The show is set in 1982, but the scenic design by Kevin Klakouski and costume design by Antonio Consuegra look like it might be 1992 or 2002, which doesn’t hurt the production at all. In fact, the modernized styling creates an immediate connection with the present as opposed to an impression that you are watching a historical piece. After all, sitcoms dip you into their own time/space continuum, where people interact using quotable jokes, take risks and turn the most upsetting life circumstances into reasons to laugh (e.g. the alcoholic single mother who lent her son to some neighbors and can’t find him).
You will find all of this abundantly in Daddy Issues. Although the jokes are sometimes predictable, the actors’ ensemble pulls it off and makes the show enjoyable. The duo of supportive friends, fiery Levi Krauss (Shua Potter) and phlegmatic Henrietta Hudson (Elisabeth Klein), were my absolute favorite. Somewhere between not so original jokes about Henrietta’s weight and Levi’s femininity, those two created a comedic sidekick duo both caricature-like yet believable and therefore lovable.
Daddy Issues plays at the Theatre at St. Clement’s, 423 West 46th Street, through November 6, 2016. The running time is 90 minutes with no intermission. Performances are Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays at 8, and Sundays at 3. Tickets start at $69 and are available at daddyissuestheplay.com or by calling 866-811-4111.
|
Daddy Issues Reviews Oct 20
2016, 05:10:02 PM
Theatre is Easy Review
Daddy Issues
By Marshall Goldberg; Directed by David Goldyn
Off Broadway, Play Runs through 11.6.16 Theatre at St. Clement's, 423 West 46th Street
by Lexi Orphanos on 10.6.16
Shua Potter and Alex Ammerman in Daddy Issues. Photo by Stephen M. Cyr.
BOTTOM LINE: Daddy Issues seamlessly marries tumult to tenderness with its bold cast of comics.
At the start of this whirlwind comedy, struggling actor Donald Moscowitz (Matt Koplik) is preparing for a callback when his father Sid (the effortlessly witty Tony Rossi) barges in with an odd request. In a brilliantly ignorant conversation, Sid relates how Irving Plotnick’s son just turned straight and settled down, so it’s time Donald does the same. However, before Donald can correct his father on just how insulting this all is, Sid lays down an offer too good to refuse: Grandma Moscowitz will double his inheritance if he has a baby. As only a striving artist can understand, the dollar signs cloud Donald’s judgment, and suddenly he's told his father that he does have a son, "Ryan," with Mary Ellen McGuire, his ex-girlfriend from his college musical theatre club.
Naturally, the lie snowballs as mother Marion (the sharply comedic Kate Katcher) arrives at the apartment with onesies in tow. Grandma (Deb Armelino) soon follows and exclaims that she can “finally die” once she’s met her great grandson. Donald is clearly in the throes of his own lie, but gets caught up as his family finally says all he’s ever wanted to hear: “we love you, and we’re proud of you.” With the help of his fabulous best friends Levi (Shua Potter) and Henrietta (Elizabeth Klein), Donald hires the neighbor’s 10-year-old son Johnny Walker (Alex Ammerman) to play Ryan, and Levi will slip into one of his numerous drag ensembles to portray mother Mary Ellen. What could possibly go wrong?
What makes Daddy Issues so captivating is the cast’s agility within the comedic script. The writing itself is a pure joke machine, from the Moscowitz family trying to check if Ryan is circumcised, to Levi re-entering in a pink wig and gold ensemble as his new persona “Ophelia Crotch.” Daddy Issues is a fine example of a comedy where the script could easily take the lead, but this nimble cast—under excellent direction by David Goldyn—knows exactly how to make the audience squirm with anxiety and then let the tension snap in moments of sheer comic genius.
Beyond humor, Marshall Goldberg’s play taps into the core of what it means to be a father, mother, and son. Although Johnny Walker comports himself as a slick 10-year old businessman, he and Donald make sweet connections, with Donald blushing every time he’s called “dad,” and Johnny genuinely relishing connection with a stable adult, given his stress with his alcoholic mother. And as events unfold, Donald learns just who his true family is. Especially in a day and age when the nuclear family is fading from the norm, Daddy Issues provides a strong reminder that if you “have a little faith,” the love you give can always come full-circle.
(Daddy Issues plays at the Theatre at St. Clement’s, 423 West 46th Street, through November 6, 2016. The running time is 90 minutes with no intermission. Performances are Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays at 8, and Sundays at 3. Tickets start at $69 and are available at daddyissuestheplay.com or by calling 866-811-4111.)
Daddy Issues is by Marshall Goldberg. Directed by David Goldyn. Scenic design by Kevin Klakouski. Costume design by Antonio Consuegra. Lighting design by Mitchell Ost. Press Representative Ron Lasko (Spin Cycle). Production stage management by Jennifer-Elizabeth Cooper. Assistant stage management by Stephen Millett. General management by 22Q Entertainment. Casting director Sara Koch. Marketing by Stephen Cyr. Associate produced by Barbara Snyder. Produced by David Goldyn.
The cast is Alex Ammerman, Deb Armelino, Allyson Haley, Kate Katcher, Elizabeth Klein, Matt Koplik, Shua Potter, and Tony Rossi.
|
Daddy Issues Reviews Oct 20
2016, 05:08:13 PM
Eye on The Arts Review
Performing Arts: Theater DADDY ISSUES October 14, 2016 Don’t we all need a good laugh these days? Run to DADDY ISSUES, now at St. Clements through November 7th to give your stomach a steady workout. Marshall Goldberg’s 90 minute play is believable farce, the ending, and the scene changes, all of which you can easily predict. Daddy, played by Tony Rossi, is annoying, as only overbearing fathers can be, except when he flashes his imagination by upstaging his son rehearsing for a cat food commercial audition. The son (Matt Koplik) tries to repeatedly usher him out of his apartment, and chimes in unison as his father recounts one of his oft-told tales.
DADDY ISSUES centers around a family’s expectations and their hysteria once their greatest desire - a grandchild - is fulfilled, and then, briefly feared lost. The cast of stock characters is strong, though Donald Moscowitz, the lead, has the most difficult job of being an actor of questionable potential, a gay single man who broke the heart of his college sweetheart, played with vibrancy by Allyson Halley. He holds his hands like a wispy clerk, as he withstands the bullying of his father, and then, surprisingly schemes to introduce a son, played with calm and charm by Alex Ammerman, a son no one knew about - including himself - to his grandmother who had promised to double his inheritance, should he ever produce a child.
David Goldyn directed this fun family sit-com, perfect for cable, peppered with pokes at the Jewish obsession with circumcisions, and at the impracticality of commercial acting. Goldberg strangely hits a low point with the repeated audition scene, given that he worked for years as an advertising copywriter who worked on such accounts as Li’L Friskies Cat Food. Kate Katcher, Deb Armelino, Shua Potter, and Elizabeth Klein complete the cast. The living room set is by Kevin Klakouski, costumes by Antonio Consuegra, lighting by Mitchell Ost. Nominated for Best Off Broadway Play by broadwayworld.com for its showcase production in 2016, DADDY ISSUES is a well crafted hoot! EYE ON THE ARTS, NY -- Deirdre Towers
|
Daddy Issues Reviews Oct 20
2016, 05:06:52 PM
Theater Pizazz Review Share This Family Matters: Daddy Issues
Posted on Oct 7, 2016 in Theater Reviews
by Steve Nardoni
Many of us have a hard time looking back 30 years, and in particular to the 1980s where memories from back then were blurred by Slippery Nipples and nose candy. But even prior to curtain up (there is no curtain, actually) the new, fun-filled production Daddy Issues (playing through November 7 at St. Clement’s) gets us into that decade with soundtracks like “Upside Down,” “Boy from New York City,” and “Wanna Be Startin’ Somethin’.” Speaking of the lack of curtain, it gave us the chance to really check out the set, a tastefully appointed 80s apartment with walls the color of coral. Later on in the play we were disenchanted to be informed that the color was “cantaloupe,” not coral.
So the stage is set for a look-see at the conundrum facing Donald Moskowitz (Matt Koplik). Donald is an aspiring actor who seems comfortable in his own skin being a gay man who likes to interior decorate. But annoyingly overbearing parents want him to ante up a grandson for them, (and a great grandson for Grandma Moskowitz who we are constantly reminded has a “dropped bladder” and no reason to live). As many biological families did back then, they all dismiss the fact that he is gay, and his dad, Sid, insists that he “man up” and father a child. Not so much for Donald’s sake but more for Sid (Toni Rossi); Donald’s mom, Marion (Kate Katcher); and Grandma/Bubbe (Deb Armelino). Sid is particularly nonplussed that Donald opted for “fruity” cantaloupe wall paint over a more “masculine” color.
While Donald practices for a cat food commercial (mewing required!) Sid continues to browbeat poor Donald about his career, where he lives, and that elusive grandson. Exasperated, Donald creates the fiction that he fathered a son 10 years ago. Sid is cluelessly ebullient and shares con brio the fab news with Donald’s mom and Bubbe. They all descend on Donald, kvelling to no end with Grandma’s pledge to double Donald’s inheritance.
Co-dependency flourishes as Donald, seeing how happy his family would be, seeks the help of his non-traditional family (hysterical Levi Krauss, the nellie drag queen played by Shua Kraus; and spot-on Henrietta Hudson (Elizabeth Klein), who would have been identified in that era with the slur, “fag hag.&rdquo Together they scheme to hire a boy from the building (Johnny Walker, named so by his hard-drinking mom) as a surrogate son to be named Ryan McGuire. Alex Ammerman as the 10-year-old Johnny/Ryan captures the characteristics essential for his role: ingenuity laced with cunning, and a knack for relating to his surrogate dad.
Then the real fun begins. Levi and Henrietta vie for the role of the fictional Ryan’s mom, Mary Ellen McGuire, the college sweetheart Donald dumped when he came out of the closet. With nods to La Cage Aux Folles and Noises Off, we welcome from the stage the bombardment of three Mary Ellen McGuires and calculatingly hysterical ethnic and general humor. Written by Marshall Goldberg and directed/produced by David Goldwyn, there are a whole host of Daddy Issues: circumcision, fageleh interior designers, a drag queen and that that damned dropped bladder. All of which contribute to an evening of merriment.
Despite what potentially could have been unhappiness and estrangement for Donald, the plot neatly ices the cake and lights the candles to celebrate families: family of origin and family of choice. Gay men have learned to survive—then and now—by forming families beyond their biological families. Certainly a few may find Daddy Issues a bit dated, particularly through the lens of 2016, but for me it was funny and sweet theater.
|
Daddy Issues Reviews Oct 20
2016, 05:04:33 PM
Theatre Scene Review
Daddy Issues Marshall Goldberg’s new comedy approaches familial issues and expectations in a hilarious and heartfelt way.
Posted on October 15, 2016 by Courtney Marie in Off-Broadway, Plays, Still Open Shua Potter, Alex Ammerman and Matt Koplik in a scene from “Daddy Issues” (Photo credit: Stephen M. Cyr) Courtney Marie, Critic Marshall Goldberg’s new comedy, Daddy Issues, will give your crazy family a run for their money. The Moscowitzs are a tight-knit family that won’t bend when it comes to their son adhering to the specific road map they’ve created for his life, as he attempts to break free and pursue a career out of their comfort zone. Mr. and Mrs. Moscowitz are not shy about expressing their disapproval about some of their son’s choices, such as his passion for acting or that he lives a gay lifestyle, and will not let him forget their greatest wish of all – for Donald to give them a grandchild. David Goldyn’s direction is thoughtful, strategic, and clever.
The gregarious Matt Koplik plays Donald Moscowitz who constantly bears the brunt of his parents’ overbearing natures. He is instantly likable, charming, and relatable as any young person can identify with in trying to maintain his independence while also respecting his parents. Kate Katcher and Tony Rossi play Donald’s parents and make quite the electric pair as they are nothing short of domineering. With his close friends, Levi and Henrietta, by his side, Donald is able to concoct an elaborate story that he hopes will make his parents happy and one that he will be able to pull off without hurting anybody’s feelings.
The adorable Alex Ammerman who “plays” Donald’s son is eloquent, heartfelt, and just plain, delightful, in his efforts to keep the family happy and be there for his dad. The final scene, while predictable, delivers a fine testament to this little boy’s character and just how elated he is to receive the ending he truly deserves. Grandma Moscowitz displays a special attachment to him, as her final dream in life is to meet her great grandson. Deb Armelino’s portrayal of Grandma is absolutely hysterical and embodies the sweet and caring nature of a grandmother with a kick as she takes pleasure in driving her daughter-in-law Marion absolutely insane. Deb Armelino, Kate Katcher, Matt Koplik and Shua Potter in a scene from “Daddy Issues” (Photo credit: Stephen M. Cyr) Shua Potter’s Levi and Elizabeth Klein’s Henrietta bring the party to this production as their flashy personalities take center stage in their efforts to help Donald. Humorous and self-motivated in their individual approaches, these two will not give up the façade and take their roles very seriously even when meeting the real character they are portraying. When Donald’s ex-girlfriend shows up looking for her son, hilarity ensures. Allyson Haley’s Mary Ellen McGuire has had one partner in life after her break-up from Donald and his name is Johnny Walker. In fact, she is so in love with this whiskey, that she names her one and only son after him.
The costume design by Antonio Consuegra relies on basic contemporary attire, as the story takes place in Donald’s small apartment, and provides a combination of casual house clothes such as blue jeans and polo shirts, with a bit more dressy options chosen for the female characters. Marion is always put together with her nails and hair nicely done. The scenic design by Kevin Klakouski remains true to the typical bachelor pad chic — minimal furniture, a bar area, and various items strewn about the space.
For a fun twist on family drama, Marshall Goldberg’s Daddy Issues delivers. Approaching familial issues and expectations in a hilarious and heartfelt way, this comedy makes a powerful statement and has something for each member of the family. Daddy Issues (through November 7, 2016)
The Theatre at St. Clement’s, 423 W 46th Street, between 9th & 10th Avenues, in Midtown Manhattan
For tickets, visit the box office at St. Clement’s or http://www.DaddyIssuesThePlay.com
Running time: 90 minutes with no intermission
|
Daddy Issues Opens off Broadway. Michael Musto Commerical attached. Sep 28
2016, 10:35:32 PM
First preview tomorrow. Anyone going?
|
Daddy Issues Opens off Broadway. Michael Musto Commerical attached. Sep 19
2016, 04:20:26 PM
Daddy Issues, after a critically acclaimed off broadway run, reopens OFF BROADWAY
Theatre at St Clements 423 West 46th Street
The show is a hoot if I do say so myself.
Click on the link below for the Michael Musto commercial for Daddy Issues
https://youtu.be/8Jz_BIA30NI
Starring Kate Katcher (Broadway's Fiddler on the Roof-Tzeitel opposite Zero Mostel and Hershel Bernardi.)
Shua Potter (Broadway's Mary Poppins)
Alex Ammerman (Broadway's Mothers and Sons.
Also Starring Tony Rossi and Armelino,Allyson Haley, Elizabeth Klein and Matt Koplik make their off Broadway Debuts.
Directed by David Goldyn
Written by Marhsall Goldberg
Tickets and info at www.daddyissuestheplay.com
http://daddyissuestheplay.com
|
Ken Fallin Art on Daddy Issues Mar 10
2016, 01:01:05 PM
Kate Katcher who plays Marion was in the revival cast of Fiddler on the Roof with Zero Mostel and Alex Ammerman who plays Johnny Walker was in Mothers and Sons
|
Why did Bonnie & Clyde flop? Mar 5
2016, 06:58:43 PM
It flopped because of Frank Wildhorne's Name. He is the one they are making fun of "In the song that goes like this" in Spamalot. He is known as the Poperetta King. And that's not a complement. NY Theatre can be a popularity contest and unfortunately Wildhorne is not popullar. I am not a fan of his past scores but I felt Bonnie and Clyde was a very different animal and had a gorgeous score showing a lot of respect for the 20's period and was quite a good musi
|
Ken Fallin Art on Daddy Issues Mar 5
2016, 06:45:18 PM
Here is the link to the Ken Fallin Art for Daddy Issues. http://daddyissuestheplay.com/img/DaddyIssues_Illustration.jpg Daddy Issues is a new farce which Michael Musto of Out Magazine called "Hilarious." It's a cross between Birdcage and a Neil Simon Comedy. The plot: Donald Moscowitz has overbearing parents. They disapprove of his lifestyle, flair for decoration and choice of profession. The only thing that will make them happy is for him to give them a grandchild. He hires the ten year old kid from downstairs. What could go wrong. The Website is www.Daddyissuestheplay.com
|
Daisy Eagan opens off Broadway in Daddy Issues! Feb 5
2016, 07:37:06 PM
I was at the reading last year when it was called Here Pussy Puss Puss. Lots of fun. Can't wait.
|
Daisy Eagan opens off Broadway in Daddy Issues! Feb 4
2016, 07:20:24 PM
Website http://daddyissuestheplay.com/
|
Tony Winner Daisy Eagan opens in Daddy Issues at Davenport Feb 4
2016, 07:06:04 PM
http://daddyissuestheplay.com/img/DaddyIssues_Poster_v4r3.jpg poster above Daisy Eagan (Tony Award Secret Garden) opens in Daddy Issues at the Davenport Theatre March 31. I was at the reading last year and it was a laugh out loud comedy! Don't miss it. Michael Musto called it "Hilarous!" It's a risque comedy for the whole family. "Donald Moscowitz has overbearing parents. They disapprove of his choice of career, flair for decoration and gay lfiestyle choice. The ony thing that will make them happy is for him to give them a grandchild. He hires the 10 year old kid from downstairs to play his son. What could go wrong? Also stars Mary Ellen Ashley, Yuval David, Tony Rossi, Paul Lessard, Alex Ammerman, Elizabeth Klein, Megan McPhee and Austin Levine. And of course Daisy Eagan https://vimeo.com/149911099 Video teaser above.
Website
|
You must log in to view off-topic posts.
|
|