I really didn't think I was going to do a "Top
Ten" list plays for the year the way I did last year. I wasn't
thinking it was going to be an annual thing for Jamespeak. I compiled
a list for 2004 because I had ended up just seeing so many plays and
so many good plays, including Bug, which had reminded
me why I absolutely love theatre.
This year however, I didn't see quite as many shows (don't ask me
why), so I thought it would be kind of odd to do a repeat "Best
of" list. When November approached, I kept flipping and flopping
on the issue and then decided, "Ah, screw it." What made
me ultimately decide to do this again was that there was a number
of plays I had seen this past year that made me want to give a proverbial
"shout out."
I think the fun thing of doing a list like this for theatre is that
you get a better sense of the aesthetic tastes of the person making
the list, as opposed to the "Top Ten Films of the Year"
lists that are all over the place, since the bulk of those are more
or less the same (sure, some critics put Brokeback Mountain
in the number 2 slot and others put it in the number 4, but you basically
see the same list of movies on different sites).
FULL DISCLOSURE: I did not see any Broadway shows this year, so you
won’t find any on this list. I also missed a number of apparently
great fan-favorites, such as All Wear Bowlers, I Found
Her Tied to My Bed and The Pillow Man. I also saw none
of the plays
that won NYIT Awards. I’m really sorry I missed these, and
from what I hear, they would have been seriously considered for the
list had I seen them.
HALF-DISCLOSURE: There are also some plays that did get some acclaim
that I did see this year that are absent from the list. Since I do
not want to mention names and hurt people’s feelings, I will
not mention which ones they are (suffice it to say I saw a couple
that I did not like).
So of course take this (like all lists) with more than a few grains
of salt.
Now, what constitutes being put in this Top Ten list compiled by
Little Jimmy Comtois? The main criterion is that, while watching it,
I’m reminded or inspired to “do” a Top Ten list.
In other words, if I’m watching the show and think, “I
should do a ‘Top Ten’ this year,” it goes in.
I also have to see more than 30 shows. That way, I can (in theory)
devise a list of the ten best plays I’ve seen, the ten worst*
and at least 11 or so that were pretty cool to okay to just kinda
lame in an inoffensive way.
So, did I see enough plays this year (i.e., at least 31)? Yes, but
barely. From my notes and recollections, I saw about 40 (a little
more than three per month). I’d feel a little more comfortable
with about 50 or 60 viewed, but there you are.
You’ll notice there are only nine, not ten, entries on the
list this year. The reason for that is because only seven shows I
saw this year made me go, “Ah, yes. This is why I love theatre,”
feeling. No inference about the “Sad State of New York Theatre”
should be made from this.
So, with all that out of the way, here’s my list for 2005:
10. Honorable mention: The Billy Nayer Show
No, this is actually a band, not a play. However, this band, fronted
by the writer/director/star of The American Astronaut, has
such a theatrical stage presence, and since watching them at Galapagos
in Williamsburg was simply unbridled gleeful fun — the kind
of gleeful fun I have when I see a good play — I had to mention
them.
9. Just Happy to Be Here? / Skinpoppin
(Arch Productions, “Just Happy to Be Here?” written and
performed by Damien D. Smith, directed by Jason Summers; “Skinpoppin”
written and performed by Basil Scrivens, directed by Ozzie Jones)
I'm often very wary of plays dealing with September 11 or hot-button
“issues,” but was amazed at the display of honesty, insight
and candor put into this double-bill of one-man shows. In the first,
“Just Happy to Be Here?” Mr. Smith did not reduce any
of the characters as stereotypes or resort to vitriolic "Bush-bashing."
Likewise, Mr. Scrivens' characters in "Skinpoppin" were
pitch-perfect (particularly his opening as a homeless heroin addict
trying to sell the audience — me — eight-tracks). Both
shows just rang true.
8. Merrily We Roll Along
(Purgason Productions, book by George Furth, music & lyrics by
Stephen Sondheim, directed by Steve Velardi)
Although I’m not as big a Sondheim fan as Pete is, I just had
fun watching the cast of this musical (which I had never seen before)
had, particularly Joshua William Gelb, the actor playing Charley (the
guy had sweat 15 pounds off his face singing "Franklin Shepard,
Inc."). Admittedly, the production was a bit amateurish, but
so what? It had more energy and enthusiasm than most Off-Broadway
shows, and made me forget my usual cynicism that I bring with to any
play (especially musicals).
7. Fleet Week: The Musical
(Gideon Productions, book by Mac Rogers, music by Sean Williams, lyrics
by Jordanna Williams, directed by Eric Pliner)
Yes, I’m as surprised as you that not one, but two musicals
made it to the list this year. What can I say? The toast of the NYC
International Fringe this year, the relentlessly silly musical about
gay sailors stopping a terrorist plot while in New York (trust me;
despite the plot description, there’s no deep political message
or agitprop going on here) did cater to my taste for juvenile and
“Ole’ Timey” humor. Also, I’m impressed that
Mac, Sean and Jordanna staged a musical that was damn fun and damn
funny, with cool musical tunes.
6. Aspen or Bust! Red Bastard vs. Deenie Nast
(Written and performed by Eric Davis and Audrey Crabtree, respectively)
Another double-bill. “Children should be eaten and not heard.”
So says Red Bastard, a “Fruit of the Loom” spokesman reject,
to an obnoxious and disruptive brat kids in the front row who interrupted
his show the night I went. Rather than be upstaged by the kid, Red
Bastard decided to spank and spit on (for real**)
the pint-sized heckler. His counterpart, Dennie Nast (a.k.a. Audrey
Crabtree) was a female Tony Clifton who’s been beaten down by
the Hollywood system (and her need to self-medicate). Red Bastard’s
(a.k.a. Eric Davis’) ability to deal with his heckler was almost
alone worth the price of admission and the reason for being on this
list. I’m looking forward to seeing what these two do next.
5. Freak Out Under the Apple Tree: (Some of) The Best of
Tom X. Chao
(Written by Tom X. Chao, performed by Chao and Erin A. Leahy)
These short comedic pieces by Chao ranged from being full on silly
to thought provoking to introspective. I think I’ve mentioned
this before, but anytime Mr. Chao has a show going on, I know, as
an audience member, I’m in good hands.
4. The Man Who Laughs
(Stolen Chair Productions, conceived and directed by Jon Stancato)
A play based on a story by Victor Hugo, done as a black & white
silent film. Yes, there’s a gimmick going on here. But the gimmick
works, and it works to convey an interesting and captivating
story. It reminded me that theatre can be fun (something I tend to
forget when I go see shows). Also, this was the play that clinched
it for me to decide to do a “Best of” list for 2005.
3. Faust in Love (Faust 1.2)
(Target Margin, adapted and directed by David Herskovits)
Telling one part of Goethe’s Faust about the titular
character selling his soul to the devil. This piece, I must say, was
downright hypnotic. I really have no other way to describe it; watching
it brought me into a fugue state that made me forget about the outside
world. I don’t know if it was the story, the casting, the set
or sound design or what, but I was just sucked in right from the start
and engaged until curtain call. Maybe I just like plays about Satan
that have nudity.
2. Hail Satan
(Gideon Productions, written by Mac Rogers, directed by Jordana Williams)
What is it with Satanism being featured twice on the list this year?
And what is it with me congratulating Gideon Productions twice? A
very dense and unnerving horror play that deals with the psychological
and philosophical horrors of subversion and shunning God. Sean Williams
was spot-on as the head of a small group of Satan worshippers, playing
him as if he were the leader of the New York Church of Christ.
And the Number One play I saw in 2005….
1. A Beginner’s Guide to Deicide
(Vampire Cowboys, created by Qui Nguyen & Robert Ross Parker)
Hot chicks. Fighting. Puppets. Movies. I knew that, no matter if I
decided to do a list or not, this would be hands-down the best play
I saw in 2005. (Another full disclosure: Vampire Cowboys invited me
to write and perform a piece for their “Revamped” November
fundraiser, which I thought was flattering and an honor, and no, this
did not influence my decision at all.) This was one of those shows
that did nearly everything right that an Off-off-Broadway production
could do. Not once did I check my watch or fidget in my seat. A character
at the beginning told the audience the show was 90 minutes long. We
were then told that we had reached the halfway point, where rather
than provide an intermission, we were shown a cartoon unrelated to
the play about a little fat ninja. What was (is) brilliant about doing
that was that it gave the audience a mental break from the story that
an intermission provides, but didn’t sap the audience’s
attention that intermissions often do. And, it was pure, unapologetic
fun.
So, that’s my list for 2005. Coming up next, an ongoing “dialogue”
with playwright and theatre blogger Mac Rogers and my attempt to ride
his and Gideon Productions’ coattails.
Needing to get out more,
James “Social Pariah” Comtois
January 18, 2006
* And no, don’t worry. I have no interest in
coming up with a “Bottom Ten” list. I’m a nervy
prick, I know, but I don’t want to invite bad karma that
badly.
** Ah, don’t worry people. The kid’s
(stupid and neglecting) mother gave him permission.