Review: Phoenix Theatre's 'Seminar'

October 31, 2012
Back to TopCommentsE-mailPrint

For the Midwest premiere of Theresa Rebeck’s recent Broadway play “Seminar” (through Nov. 25), the Phoenix Theatre has assembled an ideal local cast quintet, given them a smartly designed, equally attractive set to play in, and found an understanding director who doesn’t sacrifice the truths of the characters for laughs.

What the Phoenix can’t do, unfortunately, is rewrite the last scene of Theresa Rebeck’s play or change some of her blatantly false plot points.

For the most part, “Seminar,” which closed on Broadway just a few months ago, is an implausible but pleasurable comedy about a quartet of developing writers (Lauren Briggeman, Neal Eggeson, Lisa Ermel, Samuel Fain) who hire a legendary fiction scribe (Bill Simmons) to critique their work. In and around skirmishes with their take-no-prisoners teacher, they struggle with their muses and with one another in ways twentysomethings are prone to do. They learn about the skeletons in the closet of their self-absorbed mentor while figuring out how much truth they can really handle, both about their writer and about themselves.

In the intimate downstairs Basile Theatre, the characters seem more fragile than they did on Broadway, which works to the play’s advantage. And sharp directorial choices help turn potentially one note moments—including a true-telling session between the writer (Bill Simmons) and a pretentious student (Neal Eggeson)—into heartbreakers.

But I still lament the fact that Rebeck marginalizes Kate, her most interesting character, in order to make “Seminar” ultimately about the writer and chip-on-his-shoulder student Martin. Director Dale McFadden makes a noble effort to salvage it through staging, but it’s a band-aid on the playwright’s self-inflicted wound. A shame, since the rest of the most of the piece is in great shape.

Your thoughts?

ADVERTISEMENT
  • Nicely Put
    Lou I definitely agree with your assessment and interesting to hear your comparisons between the original broadway show. I wish the focus would have stayed on Kate - it would have made it much more satisfying than the whiny Martin. Read more on my thoughts at missionintrigueindy.com.

Post a comment to this blog

COMMENTS POLICY
We reserve the right to remove any post that we feel is obscene, profane, vulgar, racist, sexually explicit, abusive, or hateful.
 
You are legally responsible for what you post and your anonymity is not guaranteed.
 
Posts that insult, defame, threaten, harass or abuse other readers or people mentioned in IBJ editorial content are also subject to removal. Please respect the privacy of individuals and refrain from posting personal information.
 
No solicitations, spamming or advertisements are allowed. Readers may post links to other informational websites that are relevant to the topic at hand, but please do not link to objectionable material.
 
We may remove messages that are unrelated to the topic, encourage illegal activity, use all capital letters or are unreadable.
 

Messages that are flagged by readers as objectionable will be reviewed and may or may not be removed. Please do not flag a post simply because you disagree with it.

Sponsored by
ADVERTISEMENT
  1. If a television station wants to improve viewership, get rid of the local blackout. I was born by the brickyard, and have attended 15 or more races. I have children now, I won't attend unless circumstances are perfect. As those with growing families know, they never are. I'm always impressed that upwards of 250,000 people attend the 500. However, as a growing, or, more apt, sprawling city, Indianapolis and its immediate suburbs count almost 2.2 million. Show the race live, let the venue get a kick-back on revenues, and open-wheel racing might have a fighting chance to be relevant again. Just in time for those tax-payer lights to make sense.

  2. John Moore, I too have had the same issue recently. A property next to my house was on the Land Bank and I was interested in purchasing. When I tried to contact Reggie, I got back emails that had nothing to do with what I asked about. Actually my latest response from him was on this past Friday. I had asked about how to buy the property and if it was still available. His response to me was to contact the mayor's office to get the schedule of his appearances. (???) Hopefully the city is able to do something to fix what this guy has done, it would be nice if they would take the properties back and sell them properly so land owners like me and you mother would have a fair chance.

  3. I too work in the industry, with over 25 years of experience and your political spin has probably nothing to do with any rebranding. "Let's dress it up" would have nothing to do with the government "telling us how and what to eat." Give it a political rest. And being a producer for a radio show doesn't mean you've been involved in advertising and branding for 30 years.

  4. Ms. Morris did not understand the ways of the business world, otherwise, like the IMS, she could have petitioned the State Legislature for a handout of State Funds for her charity work. Ms. Morris should consider becoming a state lobbyist for Lemonade Stand Operators.

  5. David Copperfield!

ADVERTISEMENT