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Nora's offense here isn't forgery but embezzlement from the hedge fund headed by her daddy. She did that — with the help of his accountant, who "took the bullet" and has just been released from jail — in order to finance a rest cure in Italy for husband Evan, who had suffered a heart attack. Now her "partner in crime" threatens to spill the beans if Evan, who has just been tapped as CEO of a very large bank, does not give him a job. Rebeck manages to shoehorn in most of Ibsen's action, even Nora's tarantella, along with commentary on class differences and great hunks of contemporary psychobabble. But her play is a soap opera, whereas Ibsen's plays, even when melodramatic, are inexorable.

This does not stop New Rep from fielding a quality production helmed by Bridget Kathleen O'Leary on a snow-trimmed McMansion set by Kathryn Kawecki. The acting is mostly sound, with Sarah Newhouse a more chicly manipulative than infantilized Nora and Gabriel Kuttner eerily calm as the embittered blackmailer. The toughest assignment falls to Will Lyman, who imparts a fervent, flirtatious charm to Nora's controlling sugar daddy of a spouse. Even when he's pushing her out of the lifeboat, you can see why she got in.

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ARTICLES BY CAROLYN CLAY
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  •   REVIEW: ZEITGEIST STAGE'S MY WONDERFUL DAY  |  March 17, 2011
    "Little pitchers have big ears," the saying goes. In My Wonderful Day, which is getting its Boston premiere from Zeitgeist Stage Company (at the BCA Plaza Black Box through March 26), the little pitcher also has a notebook in which she is inscribing the title essay. And what a day for it!
  •   CAROLYN CLAY REVIEWS PROMETHEUS BOUND, REASONS TO BE PRETTY, DOLLHOUSE  |  March 11, 2011
    Dionysius does not appear in Prometheus Bound, but that doesn't stop the American Repertory Theater from turning the 2500-year-old shout-out against tyranny attributed to Aeschylus into a bacchanal (at Oberon through April 2).
  •   REVIEW: THE HOTEL NEPENTHE; TI-JEAN & HIS BROTHERS; PUSSY ON THE HOUSE  |  March 02, 2011
    "Only connect," advises E.M. Forster, failing to add, "And be weird." John Kuntz, however, hears that double directive, perhaps blowing in the wind, and responds with The Hotel Nepenthe .
  •   THE A.R.T.'S 21ST-CENTURY AJAX  |  February 22, 2011
    An embittered soldier who snaps and commits a heinous act of violence? It's a wonder Sophocles's Ajax isn't performed as often as Hamlet .
  •   REVIEW: THE DRUID’S FINE TRIP TO INISHMAAN  |  February 04, 2011
    Although Martin McDonagh’s The Cripple of Inishmaan is the least likely of his plays to provoke a riot, as John Millington Synge’s The Playboy of the Western World did at its 1907 Dublin premiere, it is the most Synge-like of the Anglo-Irish dramatist’s works.

 See all articles by: CAROLYN CLAY

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