T-Friday, November 4, 2011 - 5 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com TV REVIEW 'Boss' loses touch with reality By KAYLA UPADHYAYA Daily Arts Writer COURTESY OF CHRIs DZOMBA This weekend, '60s-style suits will be the norm in the Rude Mechanicals' production of "Hamlet." A 1960s 'Hamlet' Rude Mechanicals go mod with classic Shakespeare play By ANNA SADOVSKAYA Daily Arts Writer Imagine a time when type- writers and ashtrays crowded together on office desks. Imag- ine girls in v minidresses Hamlet with beehive hairdos loung- Tonight and ing around tomorrow at 8 Manhattan p.m., Sunday apartments at 2 p.m. while men in Lydia Mendelssohn tailored blaz- Theatre ers listen to Tickets from $3 John Coltrane. Then picture one of these finely dressed gen- tlemen standing up to exclaim: "To be, or not to be: That is the question." Today, tomorrow and Sunday, the Rude Mechanicals will set a similar scene in their produc- tion of Shakespeare's "Hamlet." Director Emily Lyon, a junior in the School of Music, Theatre & Dance, set out to answer Ham- let's famous question as she took on the daunting task of stag- ing one of literature's most well known and difficult plays. " 'Hamlet' is a huge under- taking," Lyon said. "I started off with saying, 'Hey, I know it's "Hamlet" and people are going to have expectations, but we're going to do our own thing.' Our play is what we decide to do with it." Lyon's decision was to set the classic Shakespeare story in the 1960s - creating a "Mad Men"- inspired show, complete with men in suits and women in cock- tail dresses. "I feel like doublets and hose and men in tights, it makes people either confused or put off," Lyon said. "But to me it's such a living document, such an alive play. Why not make it more interesting and have the audi- ence excited?" Kris Reilly, a School of MT&D senior, stars as the foreboding and sulky Hamlet. Reilly said the process of fitting Hamlet into the life and style of the '60s was easier than expected. "You'll notice throughout the show that the '60s are an era that men were expected to be hyper- masculine," Reilly said.,"You're coming out of a period where the U.S. wasvery-dominant, so the men had to be very dominant. And in 'Hamlet,' there are a lot of lines and other little things that hinge on masculinity, and it fits very well." Also suited to the "Mad Men" era is the idea of silence and secrecy - a general sense of the clandestine that translates well to a '60s-era production. As in "Mad Men," "Hamlet" is full of covert expeditions, sneaky con- versations and undisclosed plot- ting, with each character having a distinct public face shown to the world and a darker, deeper private life rarely on display. Along with well-dressed men dragging swords through their apartments while contemplat- ing their lives, Reilly said the excitement of the play is found in the act of telling the tale. No matter the setting, the plot or who's speaking, sharing the story is what entices and invites people to sit through a long per- formance. "Theater is about sittingdown and experiencing something that's unstructured," Reilly said. "It's open time, and that's the mentality you need." Though "Hamlet" is not a short, comedic or light play, the script, cast and plot are all richly devised to provide the audience with the mission of any theater performance: entertainment. "Everyone is so rushed today - it's all 30-second news clips and truncated articles online," Reilly said. "We're so info-sat- urated that we often lose the indulgence of imagination, or the meaning of the informa- tion we're consuming. The play is longer, but I think if you can convince yourself to forget about the length, there's something important, human and funda- mentally beautiful about the story." In the first few seconds of Starz's new political drama "Boss," Mayor Tom Kane (Kelsey Grammer, "Cheers") of Chicago is diag- nosed with a os degenerative neurological Pilot disorder. In an abandoned Chi- Fridaysat10 p.m. cago slaughter- Starz house - chosen for its discretion - a physician meets with the mayor and ram- bles off a long list of symptoms, sounding much like a commercial Like a boss. for a drug with endless devastat- ing side effects. She gives Kane Yes, it's ea three to five years to live. believe th. To kill off the show's lead char- ing, blackr acter in that first few minutes of ing happe a pilot is bold. To have that lead politics, at character quote Upton Sinclair ing this o in the pilot's first scene is nothing done befo short of lofty. "Boss" tries hard effectively to impress the audience with its plexity an grisly portrayal of municipal poli- governmei tics, but it's unsuccessful, instead immoralit weaving a muddled storyline filled with implausible characters who can go on for long, eloquent -p monologues that never really say EV anything. The few successes of "Boss" Gra restinthetalentsofGrammer and sav the pilot's director, Gus Van Sant ("Milk"). Grammer proves he can - do drama just as well as comedy, committing fully to this complex ably for ti and disturbing character. Van and shock Sant manages to make the best of paralyz of a disorganized and strained esque ear script, infusing the show with the mayor his trademark style of close-ups more start and slow-motion sequences. But ringwitho when the camerawork is the most Likewis exciting part of a political thriller, "Boss" see there is definitelya problem. tic. The w The main failure of "Bosses" quite heav is its exaggeration of the extent idea that of debauchery in local politics. heroes an i 1. . e r c Y r , t' . r . Z Z r t E v V t 1 asy for the audience to would be completely unlovable at bribery, strong-arm- in the real world. This movement mailing and philander- began with Tony Soprano but has n at the city level of been perpetuated by recent dra- nd successfully express- matic characters like Don Draper, on television has been Walter White and Dexter Mor- re. HBO's "The Wire" gan, who capture the hearts of captured the com- television viewers despite ques- id corruption in local tionable morals and motives. But mt. But "Boss" takes the again, the writers of "Boss" outdo y to an extreme, prob- themselves. Kane is painted as a horrible, erratic tornado of a man. His only real emotional nK- sy attachment appears to be to his en IKelsey daughter Emma (Hannah Ware, r c "Shame"), but even his attempts mmner can t to contact her are not enough to this show. convince anyone Kane is worth rooting for. The other characters of "Boss" have, the potential to become he sake of dark drama interesting and dynamic, but they value. Forced injection feel contrived in the pilot. Kane's ers, "Reservoir Dogs"- wife Meredith (Connie Nielsen, -chopping, violence in "Gladiator"), with her frosty tone 's office - none of the and manipulative behavior, makes tling moments of "Boss" Betty Draper look like a ray of any sense of validity. sunshine. Emma is the only char- se, the characters of acter who piques any sort of curi- em forced and unrealis- osity. She appears to be estranged riters of the show lean from both of her parents and ily on the ever-growing works as a nurse at a free clinic. audiences love anti- Oh yeah, and she might be a drug d lead characters who See BOSS, Page 6 I I Lriwarehouse.eom Save 10-50%, offrefailprices Star of screen and stage McDonald to sing at'U' By LAUREN CASERTA DailyArts Writer Most artists see the relation- ship between the quality and quantity of their performance Audra abilities as alop- McDonald sided balanc- ing act. While Tonight at some choose 8 p.m. to specialize in a single genre Hill Auditorium or style, others Tickets from $10 only lightly dip their toes into a bit of everything. But for singing and acting veteran Audra McDonald, qual- ity and quantity aren't oppos- ing forces - instead, they're two equally important factors that, when fused together, allow her to effortlessly glide among the microphone, the stage and televi- sion screens. Tonight, McDonald will perform a wide and vibrant selection of songs at Hill Audito- rium. McDonald, whose credits include Tony-winning perfor- mances in Broadway musicals like "Ragtime" and "Carousel," countless classical and operatic concert appearances, four solo albums with Nonesuch Records and a starring role as Dr. Naomi Bennett in ABC's "Private Prac- tice," has made a name for herself in nearly every corner of the per- forming arts world. "It's somewhat rare for an artist to have such impeccable musical gifts, and yet be such a fine actress on so n Theatre Wagne perforr "Certai commu vision, McD came a; she ha by thet Wagne live per 1994 r' in "Car abilityt nearly the ori intact. B Mc T( "You ization meet t yet it v time at otherv old-fast it fit in doing a McD listic g her par nany levels," said Musical er and actress has also proven e Department Chair Brent her worth as a member of more r, who will give a pre- recent productions, like her 1999 nance talk on McDonald. starring role in the opening run nly in the musical theater of "Marie Christine," and as an rnity and in music and tele- accomplished performer of clas- she's widely respected." sical and operatic music. )onald's first successes "She's been able to bridge the s a Broadway actress, and gap . between traditional musi- d won three Tony Awards cal theater, contemporary musi- time she was 28 years old. cal theater and an operatic or r, who saw many of her classical approach to the field," rformances, including her Wagner said. "Most new works Ole as Carrie Pipperidge for (the musical theater) field ousel," was moved by her are written for a different kind to bring new life to a show of female voice, but she's proven 50 years old while keeping that you can bring highly skilled ginal spirit of the musical musical expertise to a wide, wide repertoire, and that's unusual." McDonald's highly anticipated visit will mark her fourth per- formance in Ann Arbor and her y 28, A second at HillAuditorium. While -Donald had many of McDonald's concerts and vocal performances have Won three been broadcast on PBS, and a few grainy videos of her Broadway )ny Aw ards. performances have found their way onto the Internet, Wagner encourages everyone to seize the rare opportunity to see a master felt like her character- up close and personal. was someone you would "Film and television appear- oday," Wagner said. "And ances can never really com- was still authentic to the pare with the experience of nd place of 'Carousel.' In seeing someone in person," Wag- words, there was nothing ner said. "Even if we aren't talk- hioned about her work, yet ing to her as she's performing, to what the writers were we're not passive. We're sharing nd saying perfectly." something as she's creating it and onald's ability to span sty- we exist in that moment in time, enres extends far beyond which only happens in live per- t in "Carousel." The sing- formance."