JUNK Previews

BroadwayConcierge Profile Photo
BroadwayConcierge
#1JUNK Previews
Posted: 10/3/17 at 7:29pm

Previews for the New York premiere of Pulitzer Prize winner Ayad Ahktar's Junk begin in just a few days (Thursday, October 5, 2017) at the Vivian Beaumont Theatre. Starring Steven Pasquale and featuring direction by Doug Hughes, Junk is set to open officially on November 2 for a limited run currently through January 7, 2018.

Who's going?! 

bwayphreak234 Profile Photo
bwayphreak234
#2JUNK Previews
Posted: 10/3/17 at 7:51pm

I will be there next weekend!


"There’s nothing quite like the power and the passion of Broadway music. "

JIMG3
#3JUNK Previews
Posted: 10/3/17 at 8:16pm

Updated On: 10/5/17 at 08:16 PM

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ChildofEarth
#4JUNK Previews
Posted: 10/3/17 at 9:19pm

I’ll be there this weekend!

Kkraw1024
#5JUNK Previews
Posted: 10/3/17 at 10:28pm

I'm coming for my birthday October 25.

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NYfanfromCA
#6JUNK Previews
Posted: 10/3/17 at 10:57pm

I'll be there Saturday night!  

BroadwayConcierge Profile Photo
BroadwayConcierge
#7JUNK Previews
Posted: 10/5/17 at 8:59am

Junk starts tonight! Can't wait to hear first preview reports.

JIMG3
#8JUNK Previews
Posted: 10/5/17 at 10:26am

BroadwayConcierge said: "Junkstarts tonight! Can't wait to hear first preview reports."

I’ll be there !!!

Updated On: 10/5/17 at 10:26 AM

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Jeffrey Karasarides
#9JUNK Previews
Posted: 10/5/17 at 11:10pm

So was anyone there tonight? If so, how was it?

JIMG3
#10JUNK Previews
Posted: 10/5/17 at 11:41pm

I liked the set and the staging. Sleek and fast paced. Audience reactions were very positive. Excellent performances from the cast. I was unable to see it from start to finish, but I smell a hit. 

Updated On: 10/5/17 at 11:41 PM

WhizzerMarvin Profile Photo
WhizzerMarvin
#11JUNK Previews
Posted: 10/5/17 at 11:48pm

Junk is "American Psycho: The Play" with Steven Pasquale filling in for Patrick Bateman, minus all the murder, torture and rape- at least of the literal kind. This is the other side of the story told in "Sweat;" there we saw the plight of the workers, here we see the corporate takeovers and dismantling of companies. 

I really loved Disgraced  and here Akhtar shows he can really switch up his style. Disgraced basically felt like one 90-minute dinner scene. Junk is much longer, but the scenes are short, extremely fast-paced and crammed with dialogue. Akhtar must have binged watched a few Sorkin series while writing this, as the play has that sort of feel. It could easily be adapted for film or an HBO mini-series. 

Robert Merkin (Michael Milken stand-in played by Pasquale), in reality TV terms, is given a winner's edit. He's ruthless and a grade A asshole, but not only do you know he's going to win, but Akhtar (and Pasquale) actually make you want him to win.  The plot centers on Merkin's inside trading racket to manipulate stock prices and buy up troubled companies, only to break them apart and sell off the pieces- all with the use of junk bonds. His latest target is Everson Steel, a floundering steel company with a profitable pharmaceutical division run by Tom Everson (Rick Holmes, in a touching performance). 

All of the performances are already very strong, but special mention must go to Michael Siberry, who is excellent as usual. I also got to nerd out over Ethan Phillips (Neelix on Voyager!!) in a small, but funny role. 

Act one is very tight and zips right along. I couldn't believe it flew by so quickly. Act two meanders a bit as the Everson Steel plot wraps up, but we still stick with Merkin to find out his future fate. The final scene is affecting though and worth it. There are MANY lighting and sound cues, all of which when off without a hitch. The set is somewhat reminiscent of the Birdie "Telephone Hour" boxes designed in the style of "American Psycho: The Musical." It's a minimalist approach so the focus stays firmly on the words and acting. 

I definitely recommend this. It's just too bad that instead of a 1984-esque warning about a scary future, Junk is already an American history lesson.


Marie: Don't be in such a hurry about that pretty little chippy in Frisco. Tony: Eh, she's a no chip!

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mlsheehan
#12JUNK Previews
Posted: 10/6/17 at 12:01am

It doesn't sound like much has changed from La Jolla except some of the cast.  It was an interesting and entertaining look at American capitalism.  I resonate with much of what Whizzer says above, and he pretty well summed up my reaction when I saw this last year.  The first act is super tight, the second act wanders a bit.  Overall, well worth seeing for those that don't mind a show with lots of dialogue and makes you think about how the history shown in the play reflects on and leads to our current times.

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RippedMan
#13JUNK Previews
Posted: 10/6/17 at 12:57am

Design wise, how do you think the view from the extreme sides would be? I sat there for Act One, and didn't mind it all, but just curious if it's an obstructed view. 

WhizzerMarvin Profile Photo
WhizzerMarvin
#14JUNK Previews
Posted: 10/6/17 at 8:07am

For act one I was sitting in the last seat of the orchestra house left. All of the action takes place on the thrust of the stage, so I didn't miss a second of the scene work, but you do miss out on the transitions between the scenes. 

In general, if you are one scene then your character will not be in the following scene. Scenes usually comprise 2-4 characters. After a scene has played out the actors often walk down sets of stairs into the pit as the new group of characters power walk downstage. 

I moved at intermission to center seat and the effect was much clearer. 


Marie: Don't be in such a hurry about that pretty little chippy in Frisco. Tony: Eh, she's a no chip!

Theater3232
#15JUNK Previews
Posted: 10/6/17 at 8:34am

What time did the 8pm performance end?

WhizzerMarvin Profile Photo
WhizzerMarvin
#16JUNK Previews
Posted: 10/6/17 at 8:48am

The performance was about 2:35/40. 


Marie: Don't be in such a hurry about that pretty little chippy in Frisco. Tony: Eh, she's a no chip!

dave1606
#17JUNK Previews
Posted: 10/6/17 at 12:43pm

I was there last night and was underwhelmed. The most obvious thing for me is that it is in the wrong theater for this show. It is staged like a standard proscenium arch space, but in the Beaumont that leads to the sides of the audience looking at the sides of peoples heads and missing most of the projections. For Act 1 I sat front row on the side and really did not get a good view of this production. I would avoid the sides completely for this.  I found the staging to be rather cheap and disappointing (though if they wanted to stage Assassins on that set I think it would work well!).

I enjoyed Act 1 well enough. I found the subject engaging and some of the writing pretty sharp. Act 2 is a meandering mess. The conclusions with each and every side character is frustrating and pointless. I think this show could very well accomplish its goals in 90 minutes and be much sharper. I enjoyed Pasquale and Siberry. Overall I wanted to like it more, but found that it lost its steam in act 2.

 

JIMG3
#18JUNK Previews
Posted: 10/6/17 at 1:56pm

RippedMan said: "Design wise, how do you think the view from the extreme sides would be? I sat there for Act One, and didn't mind it all, but just curious if it's an obstructed view."

There are no obstructed / partial view seats for this production. 

JIMG3
#19JUNK Previews
Posted: 10/6/17 at 1:58pm

Theater3232 said: "What time did the8pm performance end?"

It came down at 10:31.

nmlhats
#20JUNK Previews
Posted: 10/6/17 at 5:36pm

I won't see it until December (please, God, no flight delays) but I can hardly wait. I really ate up Oslo last season and I feel like this will be my 2017 version of that kind of meaty treat for my brain. 

 

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macnyc
#21JUNK Previews
Posted: 10/6/17 at 6:44pm

I would really like to see this. I saw Akhtar's Invisible Hand at NYTW last year, and it was one of my favorite plays of the year. I went out of the theater thinking that Akhtar really understands finance. 

sppunk
#22JUNK Previews
Posted: 10/6/17 at 8:23pm

Want to see this at the end of the month since nothing else jumps out (Band’s Visit that night). Any discounts by chance?

RippedMan Profile Photo
RippedMan
#23JUNK Previews
Posted: 10/6/17 at 10:55pm

I found this incredibly dull. I wasn't even partially engaged. They're all horrible, greedy people. The staging is weird and not a good use of the space. Act 2 just wanders around. It felt like it either needed to be a bigger, more epic story or a shorter more intense play. The acting was good, but nothing that is a "must-see." Wouldn't recommend it unless you are into Wolf of Wallstreet type material, and I am not. The projections were cheesy and the transitions very odd. At one point in Act 2 there is a screeching guitar playing and lights flashing all over, and then we end up in a scene with a man putting on a tux? Not sure why the transition needed to be so epic. There's a lot that happens upstage, but if you're on the side you'll be blocked by glass walls, which makes for a weird view. No one plays to the sides. And I felt bad every time a woman had to hustle down black stairs, in the dark, in heels. Also I found the costuming confusing. I'm assuming the "narrator" was purposefully not suppose to look 80s? And then I was confused by the time periods and locations. If you're on the side you'll miss projections that might help identify that. I moved to the balcony and had a better view, but still couldn't engage in it. I liked Disgrace, but it never lived up to the Pulitzer hype for me. Something about it rang false. 

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SmoothLover
#24JUNK Previews
Posted: 10/7/17 at 1:32am

I wonder why the stand -by who was appalled by my knowledge of their gender and occupation did not have a chance to see the entire show?

JIMG3
#25JUNK Previews
Posted: 10/7/17 at 2:06pm

I have to admit, you do make me laugh!

Updated On: 10/7/17 at 02:06 PM


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