Total Rating: 
***
Opened: 
March 11, 2011
Ended: 
April 10, 2011
Country: 
USA
State: 
Florida
City: 
Coral Gables
Company/Producers: 
GableStage
Theater Type: 
Regional
Theater: 
GableStage at the Biltmore Hotel
Theater Address: 
1200 Anastasia Avenue
Phone: 
305-445-1119
Website: 
gablestage.org
Running Time: 
2 hrs
Genre: 
Comedy
Author: 
Tracy Letts
Director: 
Joseph Adler
Review: 

Tracy Letts' comedy, Superior Donuts, has a distractingly large hole in it, but at
GablesStage in South Florida the performances are enough to make for a pleasant couple of hours at the theater. Funny and sweetly touching, it goes down at easily.

The play debuted in 2008 (GableStage sets it in 2009 and 2010), the year Letts won the Pulitzer for August: Osage County, and it is sort of a two-act mini opus to that magnum opus.
It's also a paean to multiethnic Chicago.

A stick-in-the-mud 60ish son of immigrants (dad from Poland, mom from Russia), Arthur unimaginatively runs the Superior Donuts shop he inherited from his father. There's a Starbucks nearby, but not even a radio -- and sometimes not even coffee – at Superior Donuts. An ambitious 49-year-old Russian, Max, in America more than a decade, owns the DVD shop next door and has plans to expand into electronics, but Arthur's place is in his way.

Along comes an eager, 21-year-old black guy, Franco, who persuades Arthur that the doughnut shop could be a happening place with the addition of a little music and some poetry readings. Franco already has written what he's sure is the next Great American Novel and asks Arthur to read it – and to be careful with it because there's no backup copy to his roughly bundled stack of paper. That's the distraction. Not only are we waiting for what we're sure is a manuscript-related tragedy, but we're wondering why Franco, who has dropped out of college, didn't at least use a campus computer lab while he was to back up at least something. It intrudes, but not as badly as it might, thanks to top-notch production values.

Joseph Adler directs a surefooted cast on a pitch-perfect set by Lyle Baskin – stools at a countertop, tables for four near the door, photos of baseball players on the walls and black-and-white linoleum on the floor, all looking decades-old drab.

Regulars into this holdover are a bag lady and a couple of good-hearted, if cartoonish cops. Muscling in are a bookie and an enforcer -- both Irish, we're told. The fight between paunchy Arthur (Avi Hoffman) and the younger and taller bookie (Gordon McConnell), as choreographed by Paul Homza, can induce real concern for the actors as bodies go flying across the stage. Arthur still wears tie-dyed T-shirts, but soliloquies make it clear the aging hippie is no stranger to depression, and Hoffman's rendering of Arthur's reminiscence of parenthood could break hearts: "I didn't know you had to have hope to raise a child."

But what Arthur lacks in hope abides in Franco, played by Marckenson Charles in the latest of several impressive performances, and Max, played by Chaz Mena, who enlivens the proceedings with every entrance.

Time to Make the Doughnuts

Cast: 
Avi Hoffman (Arthur Przybyszewski), Marckenson Charles (Franco Wicks), Chaz Mena (Max Tarazov), Patti Gardner (Officer Randy Osteen) John Archie (Officer James Bailey), Sally Bondi (Lady Boyle), Gordon McConnell (Luther Flynn), Paul Homza (Kevin Magee), Alex Alvarez (Kiril Ivakin).
Technical: 
Set: Lyle Baskin; Lighting: Jeff Quinn; Costumes: Ellis Tillman; Sound/Music: Matt Corey; Fight Choreography: Paul Homza; Production Stage Manager: Kristen Pieski.
Other Critics: 
MIAMI HERALD Christine Dolen ! MIAMI NEW TIMES Chris Joseph ! MIAMI ARTZINE Roger Martin ! SOUTH FLORIDA THEATER REVIEW Bill Hirschman !
Miscellaneous: 
<I>Superior Donuts</I> was first produced at Steppenwolf in Chicago in June 2008. That production opened on Broadway in October 2009.
Critic: 
Julie Calsi
Date Reviewed: 
March 2011