Images: 
Total Rating: 
***1/4
Previews: 
March 7, 2010
Opened: 
March 17, 2010
Ended: 
April 10, 2010
Country: 
USA
State: 
New York
City: 
New York
Company/Producers: 
The Actors Company Theater
Theater Type: 
off-Broadway
Theater: 
Beckett Theater
Theater Address: 
410 West 42nd Street
Phone: 
212-279-4200
Website: 
tactnyc.org
Genre: 
Dark Comedy
Author: 
T.S. Eliot
Director: 
Scott Alan Evans
Review: 

T.S. Eliot's The Cocktail Party is given a crackling-good presentation by The Actors Company Theatre (TACT) at the Beckett Theater on Theatre Row. How can this intellectual play, concerning commonplace domestic situations, written as poetry, crackle? With the fine cast, even the shallow banter at the beginning is intriguing and engaging as discussions become more complex in an ironic marital situation. There is a mystery, an exploration of psychiatric interpretation, descriptions and analysis of complex goals in life.

Eliot's keen analytic mind, his weird sense of humor, and his underlying Catholic mysticism with a fatalistic view of life in which you have to choose and face the consequences, becomes more and more fascinating. There is even a symbolic Trinity. Cool.

It is really well directed, with perfect timing, by Scott Alan Evans, and period (1950) costumes by David Toser enhance the play.

The set by Andrew Liebermann and Laura Jellinek is simple and quite stark, and its concept of gradually opening up doors and windows as the conflicts spill out doesn't quite work for me, nor does the transparent ceiling with light shining through it. In that opening act, when the actors are downstage, they are in shadow. Lighting by Aaron Copp is clear in Part Two, and gives a bit too much illumination in Part Three as plot is illuminated. The text would have been enough.

TACT is one of the finest ensembles in this city, and The Cocktail Party is an intellectually stimulating, quite entertaining piece of Theater that will provoke thought, conversation and argument well into the night.

Cast: 
Cynthia Harris, Simon Jones, Jack Koenig, Jeremy Beck, Ben Beckley, Lauren English, Erika Rolfsrud, Mark Alhadeff, Celia Smith.
Technical: 
Set: Andrew Lieberman & Laura Jellinek; Costumes: David Toser; Lighting: Aaron Copp; Sound: Jill BC Du Boff & Daniel Kluger; Orig Music: Joseph Trapanese; Props: Lily Fairbanks.
Critic: 
Richmond Shepard
Date Reviewed: 
March 2010