I usually enjoy Carolyn Clay’s theater reviews, but her recent piece on Company One’s inventive and imaginative Grimm contains an error. Clay complains that Kirsten Greenidge’s Thanksgiving, one of the seven short plays in the run, “has little to do with the Brothers Grimm.” But anyone familiar with the story Greenidge chose to treat, “Clever Else,” can see that the play directly retells the Grimm story in a contemporary setting, even down to Else’s disappearance at the end. It also mimics the same half-celebratory, half-mocking tone of the original toward its working-class characters, and movingly works with its theme: the idea that our identities depend on those around us and can unravel when their opinions change.
Greenidge’s smart and unexpected take on class and identity has, in fact, everything to do with the Grimm story. One would hope that before claiming the opposite a reviewer would at least look the original up.
Sarah E. Rowley
Jamaica Plain
Carolyn Clay responds:
Actually, I read “Clever Else” in its entirely, as I agree completely with Sarah Rowley that a reviewer should “at least look the original up.” However, though I appreciated aspects of Thanksgiving and could discern parallels to “Else” in its structure, its contemporary tone and theme of disappointed dreams did not seem to me to have much to do with the Grimm story. Perhaps Else is just cleverer than I am.
Not quite Trilling
Regarding your recent editorial on the planned Muslim community center in lower Manhattan: you referred to Lionel Trilling writing of a “moral imperative to be intelligent.” To the best of my knowledge, he did no such thing. I would guess you meant “the moral obligation to be intelligent,” which was the title of a 1915 essay written by John Erskine, one of Trilling’s professors at Columbia. While Trilling did refer to the essay in public at least once, the coinage — let alone the idea — should not be attributed to him. Perhaps your confusion arose because Leon Wieseltier borrowed Erskine’s title for his volume of selected Trilling essays, published by Farrar Straus Giroux in 2000 and republished by Northwestern last year.
Brian Hamilton
Madison, Wisconsin
Related:
Being Scrooge, Christmas present, Fears and rages, More
- Being Scrooge
Over the 33 years that Trinity Rep has been staging A Christmas Carol , many actors playing Ebenezer Scrooge have growled and grumped, cantankered, and curmugeoned around the stage.
- Christmas present
Christmases come and Christmases go, as psychedelic wrapping paper gives way to orderly Republican stripes, as sweet little Jimmy grows into gruff Uncle James.
- Fears and rages
Woyzeck isn't a play, it's a Rorschach inkblot test for directors and theater companies.
- Still Wonderful
It's a risky gamble, creating a stage version of Frank Capra's It's a Wonderful Life .
- Hearts and souls (and laughs too)
It's been a good year for theater around here — an ingeniously roasted dramatic chestnut here, a new and safely landed flight of fancy there. Below are 10 productions that particularly stood out.
- Big starts
I kick off my highlights of 2009 with praise for a theater company that has just finished its inaugural season: The Legacy Theater Company, founded by former City Theater artistic director Steve Burnette.
- Reading is fundamentalist
In 2009, liberals held firm control of the presidency, the US Senate, and the US House of Representatives. But there was one realm where conservatives dominated: the New York Times bestseller list.
- Play by play: December 25, 2009
Boston's weekly theater schedule
- Good and evil
From L. Frank Baum's 1900 book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz came the 1939 film; from Gregory Maguire's 1995 book Wicked came the 2003 Broadway hit of the same name.
- Interview: Raj Patel
"The opposite of consumption is not thrift but generosity; if you look at happiness studies, we are happiest when we give things away rather than when we accumulate or when we don't spend."
- Play by Play: January 1, 2010
Boston's weekly theater listings: January 1, 2010
- Less
Topics:
Letters
, Politics, Entertainment, Theater, More
, Politics, Entertainment, Theater, Kirsten Greenidge, Lionel Trilling, Muslim, CULTURE, News, Company One, Lifestyle, Less