Ozone Park

Ozone Park

Sunday, March 13, 2011

29th Street Repertory Review

Hello All! 

I just found a review of the Play when it was done by the 29th Street Repertory, directed by Tim Corcoran in September 1996. I think its a pretty good review; it gives you a good feel of how the show was received and what it should look like. Take a look:



"A CurtainUp Review


Pig


A Bleak House of Horrors



Pig is not a night-on-the-town show. It's a gut-wrenching, teeth-clenching drama about a family no politician will want to hold up as an example of family values. The setting is in one of those New York City working class sections in Queens that have come to symbolize urban rednecks living in cramped aluminum sided houses with handkerchief-sized lawns. The time is Labor Day 1990, four months before the Gulf War, with the return of a long-absent son the catalyst for airing the always simmering but never discussed tensions in a family that outdoes the dysfunctional family in Shepard's Buried Child. Instead of having a dark secret buried in the backyard, the son comes to the annual Robinson family barbecue to bury his own secret, a mysterious pig in a black garbage bag.

Like other dramas of disillusion and family discord this one has its share of humor, provided primarily by the family matriarch and her childless sister--and most of it harsh, for playwright Tammy Ryan's vision is, to put it mildly, grim.. Even before the house becomes dark and the two senior Robinsons make their appearance, we know from looking at Sal Perrotta's straggly backyard set that this is not a happy place. With each member of the clan we meet the depth of the family's problems become more apparent, along with the realization that their accumulated emotional baggage is going to blow up. 



Of the nine people-- whose story unfolds so explosively, there are several who offer some relief from this doomed vision of contemporary life. Bernice O'Connor, the aunt, movingly portrays her love for her husband. A Hispanic neighbor, displays an admirable blend of courage, reason and fear. And Jeanann Robinson is still young to dream of literally flying--though after this barbecue she is no longer unwounded. Can she get away, and perhaps pull her sisters along with her? Go and see this uniformly well-acted and directed play and see what you think. But do it soon. Pig runs through Oct. 12th only



PIG


By Tammy Ryan


Directed by Tim Corcoran


With Paula Ewin, Ronda Music, Robert Suttile, Leo Farley, 
Karen Philips, Thomas Wehrle, Moira MacDonald,
Frank Rodriguez, Susan Wisdom 


29th St. Repertory, 212 W. 29th St., (465-0575)


9/12/96-10/12/96 


Reviewed 9/30--Elyse Sommer"



http://www.curtainup.com/pig.html



-Kyle

1 comment:

  1. I really found this review intriguing. I hadn't at all ever considered this a super heavy drama because in the beginning it is so funny. But the comment about waiting for all of the family issues to "blow up" I think explains it well. Despite the fairly normal goings-on at the beginning of the play we always sense that things could fall apart at any moment and we are constantly waiting to see if the next moment will make their lives fall apart. I think this is interesting as an actor too to play with being conscious of the fact that the family could be obliterated at any moment. This, I think, will help us to maintain the tension throughout the whole piece.

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