Images: 
Total Rating: 
**1/2
Opened: 
December 15, 1999
Ended: 
May 14, 2000
Country: 
USA
State: 
New York
City: 
New York
Company/Producers: 
Kim Poster & PW Productions & Adam Epstein & SFX Theater Group, Center Theater Group/Ahmanson Theater in assoc. w/ Back Row Productions & Old Ivy Productions. Assoc. Producers: Bradley R. Bernstein & Marc Epstein.
Theater Type: 
Broadway
Theater: 
Music Box
Theater Address: 
239 West 45 Street
Genre: 
Peter Shaffer
Author: 
Peter Hall
Review: 

It has been 20 years since Peter Shaffer's acclaimed play Amadeus has been on Broadway, and the newest revival is dignified, well acted and also thoroughly wrongheaded. The playwright has revamped the show to remove some of the melodrama that has always bothered him, but in the process has removed the play's sinister allure. He has softened up the character of Antonio Salieri (David Suchet), making him more sympathetic and less vindictive in his complicated relationship with Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (Michael Sheen), the musical prodigy that he admires way too much to let him live a happy existence. A sub-par musician, Salieri becomes Mozart's mentor but also his unlikely foe, something Mozart doesn't truly grasp. An immature and vulgar genius, Mozart is presented as a large child in candy store, the delicacy of the art form is taken second to gut instinct, which proves futile in the harshly regulated society of the late 1700's.

Despite richly detailed performances by Suchet, Sheen and the terrific Cindy Katz as Constanze, Mozart's free-willed wife, Shaffer's tampering proves to undo even their most valiant efforts. By making Salieri more of a victim of his own thoughts, we lose the curdling dread, the evil-as-smiling-friend details. The show now devotes so much time to Salieri's woes that it may as well be called Salieri; Mozart seems more a cipher now than ever. It all results in a lovely but misguided production, despite the rich direction by Peter Hall (An Ideal Husband).

The set design, costumes and lighting are all arresting, especially an early scenes which reveals its catchy hall-of-mirrors set that reflects the audience, bringing up interesting takes on the fourth wall theory.

Another debit is how little of Mozart's music we get to revel in. For a show about a musical genius, we rarely get a sense of how thrilling his music was. In most scenes, we hear a few bars before another actor erupts in a monologue that is thoroughly unnecessary, since the brilliant compositions should speak for themselves. The show also forecasts its conclusions before they happen, so when they do, there is little surprise or sense of discovery. Too much is explained here; there seem to be dozens of monologues throughout, when a few simple directions or gestures might suffice. You may therefore be compelled to rent Milos Forman's Oscar-winning 1984 film. At least in that version, you'll get to fill in the gaping holes in this elegant but seriously lacking revival.

Cast: 
David Suchet (Antonio Salieri), Michael Sheen (Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart), Cindy Katz (Constanze Weber), David McCallum (Emperor Joseph II of Austria), J.P. Linton (Count Johann Kilian Von Strack), Terence Rigby (Count Orsini-Rosenberg), Michael Keenan (Baron Van Swieten), Jake Broder & Charles Janasz (The "Venticelli"), John Rainer (Major Domo), William Ryall (Salieri's Valet), Robert Machray (Salier's Cook), John Towey (Kapellmeister Bonno), Glynis Bell (Teresa Salieri), Kate Miller (Katherina Cavalieri), Jeffrey Bean, Geoffrey Blaisdell, Dan Mason & Kevin Orton (Servants & Citizens of Vienna).
Technical: 
Set & Costumes: William Dudley; Lighting: Paule Constable; Sound: Matt McKenzie; Casting: Gillian Diamond (UK) Pat McCorkle CSA (US); UK Mktg: AKA Ltd.; US Mktg: The Nancy Richards Group; PSM: Susie Cordon; Prod Mgr: Peter Fulbright; Assoc Lighting: Tony Simpson; GM: 101 Productions Ltd; Press: Boneau/Bryan-Brown.
Other Critics: 
AISLE SAY David Spencer + / BACKSTAGE Irene Backalenick + / NEWSDAY Linda Winer ! / NEW YORK John Simon + / NY DAILY NEWS Fintan O'Toole ? / NY PRESS Jonathan Kalb ? / NY TIMES Clive Barnes ! Ben Brantley ? / TOTALTHEATER David Lefkowitz +
Critic: 
Jason Clark
Date Reviewed: 
December 1999