TheaterMania.com login my profile gold club
Broadway New York Shows & Tickets Discount Tickets News, Reviews and Features Video Music and Showtunes Industry Services
• EXCLUSIVE THEATER DISCOUNTS
• MONTHLY GIVEAWAYS
  SIGN UP FOR FREE
  
 
 
Broadway
Off Broadway
Off-Off Broadway
Boston
Chicago
DC Metro
Florida
Las Vegas
London
Los Angeles
Minneapolis/St. Paul
New York
Philadelphia
San Francisco
Seattle
 
Theater News
Theater Reviews
Feature Stories
Peter Filichia's Diary
News Archives
Boston
Chicago
DC Metro
Florida
Las Vegas
London
Los Angeles
Minneapolis/St. Paul
New York
Philadelphia
San Francisco
Seattle
 Reviews  

Speed-the-Plow

Reviewed By: David Finkle · Oct 24, 2008  · New York

Raul Esparza, Jeremy Piven, and Elisabeth Moss<br>
in <i>Speed-the-Plow</i><br>
(© Brigitte Lacomb)
Raul Esparza, Jeremy Piven, and Elisabeth Moss
in Speed-the-Plow
(© Brigitte Lacomb)
Instances of successful-playwrights-turned-screenwriters-and-filmmakers biting the Hollywood hand that feeds them are a dime a dozen. So, originality isn't a crucial element in Speed-the-Plow, David Mamet's punch in the Tinseltown nose, which is receiving a more-than-acceptable 20th anniversary revival at the Barrymore Theatre Yet while director Neil Pepe and his cast meet most of the script's demands, the production never quite reaches the same fully explosive possibilities as Matthew Warchus' recent London production, starring Kevin Spacey and Jeff Goldblum.

What Mamet brings to this frequently-told tale is a theatrical dynamism that throws off so many sparks it looks as if he's produced a fistful of fresh fireworks. He does it by shoving on stage newly promoted Hollywood executive Bobby Gould (Jeremy Piven) with cockily yet desperately hopeful would-be producer Charlie Fox (Raul Esparza), who are all set to collaborate on a commercial hit -- and then tosses in a devilish complication: Bobby's temp secretary Karen (Elisabeth Moss).

While Karen's at Bobby's pad in the evening -- lured there in part on a bet that the two operators have -- she talks the malleable fellow into junking Charlie's surefire prison flick project in favor of adapting a literary novel of the sort that has Oscar potential, a turn of events which sends Charlie into a tailspin the next morning.

The 90-minute piece is rich in Mamet's signature touches, notably the cornucopia of hilariously damning dialogue rat-a-tatted as if from an AK-47. Spewing his objection to putting the novel under question on the screen, the angry Charlie says: "Hey, I believe in the Yellow Pages, Bob, but I don't want to film it." Also by the luck of timing, there are several lines about "mavericks" that get today's audiences chuckling -- not to mention numerous horrifyingly comic takes on the dumbing down and screwing up of the culture that seem just as relevant today as when they were written.

Bobby and Charlie are part of the phalanx of deficiently mature men that Mamet habitually sees populating the modern world. The compromises that make up their survival tactics are too true to be ignored -- a consistent Mamet strength. Also present here is a version of the enigmatic woman whom Mamet often sees disturbing what he seems to wish were an unfettered man's world.

Broadway veteran Esparza -- who finds new venom every time he articulates "Bob" -- gives a performance that taps all Charlie's uncertainty and volatility. Moss, who plays career gal Peggy Olson on AMC's Mad Men, tidily strikes a nearly impossible balance between naivete and ambition. For his part, Piven seems commendably intent on not bringing any of his well-known Entourage character, agent, Ari Gold, to a character that can actually call for Ari Gold elements. But while Piven's more reticent interpretation is supported by the script, it ultimately diffuses the stepped-on landmine that Speed-the-Plow can truly be.


Share on Facebook


Insider Comments:

--There are no comments posted yet.

Be the first to comment!
sponsor
 
ABOUT THE SHOW
New York
The Understudy
The Roundabout serves up a superbly-acted production of Theresa Rebeck's backstage comedy.
Reviewed by: Sandy MacDonald »
Children at Play New York » Quartett New York »
Idiot Savant New York » Nightingale New York »
Creature New York » Made in Heaven New York »
The New Electric Ballroom New York » The Lily's Revenge New York »
Finian's Rainbow New York » Embraceable Me New York »
Paula West New York » Brighton Beach Memoirs New York »

Join the TM Insider for FREE!
RSS Feed
By providing information about entertainment and cultural events on this site, TheaterMania.com shall not be deemed to endorse,
recommend, approve and/or guarantee such events, or any facts, views, advice and/or information contained therein.

©1999-2009 TheaterMania.com, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Terms of Use & Privacy Policy

Click here for a current list of Broadway shows and Broadway ticket discounts.
01:22 AM