Old Money by Wendy Wasserstein
My first reading of Old Money, by
Wendy Wasserstein.
From
Wendy Wasserstein's Old
Money. Photo by Tina
Barney.I read
Old Money by Wendy Wasserstein today. Although I have never seen this play, I
did see The Heidi
Chronicles in New York with Joan Allen,
and I also saw The
Sisters Rosensweig.
Frankly, I think this is an interesting but deeply flawed play. It is not clear
to me what her message is. The characters with new money are satirized
unmercifully - my favorite parts of the play. They want fine things for their
status value but have sense of what gives them value. Their children seem to be
more interested in hating their parents than enjoying their money, but the third
generation - I'm thinking of Ovid and Vivian - seem to have the best balance.
They are aware that living the lives they've chosen is really the right path.
But its confused - the new money folks are quite happy, but nobody else seems to
be. When the play heads off into the future it has a kind of surreal quality
that is fun, but the message was pretty unclear, at least to
me.I loved Wendy Wasserstein's
play The Heidi Chronicles, and directed it once, but it was much more coherent
with a clear message and central
character. Some
links to Wendy Wasserstein:Interview
with Susan Domer Women
Writers Wendy
Wasserstein at Amazon
Her agent for
lectures Random
House Some links
on Old MoneyBomb Magazine
interview Theatre
Mania
ReviewsRichard
Connema Wendy Wasserstein's
Old Money is having its west coast premier at TheatreWorks. Ms. Wasserstein
began to earn a place as one of our prime American playwrights with The Heidi
Chronicles and The Sisters Rosensweig. However, she started losing that title
with American Daughter and now with Old Money. The main problem with this play
is that, once again, Ms. Wasserstein throws too wide a net in an attempt to show
that old monied families were once the nouveau rich in New York. The play
becomes frustrating when she covers money, real estate, social mores of high
society in the early 1900s, and the social conscience of the rich in the 21st
Century all in the space of 2 hours and 15 minutes with intermission. The
playwright goes from topic to topic in a disjointed manner and she does not
spend enough time to get to the heart of the
matter.John
Heilpern I know the
plays of Tom Stoppard, and Wendy Wasserstein, if I may say so, is no Tom
Stoppard. The comparison wouldn't normally spring to mind--and it would be an
unfair one--were it not for the fact that Ms. Wasserstein's Old Money, her new
play about old and new money at Lincoln Center's Mitzi E. Newhouse Theatre, has
borrowed uncomfortably from Arcadia, Mr. Stoppard's best play that was produced
with such distinction at Lincoln Center five years
ago.Jacque
LeSourd
Wendy Wasserstein had a great idea for
a play, but what winds up on stage at the Mitzi E. Newhouse Theatre of Lincoln
Center is a disappointing, unfocused
mess."Old Money," which opened last
night, is a terrific title. Set designer Thomas Lynch's setting, a splendid room
in a billionaire's restored Manhattan town house, is ripe with possibilities.
But this time we find the witty author of "The Sisters Rosensweig" and "The
Heidi Chronicles" just spinning her wheels. She doesn't seem to know what she is
trying to say, and director Mark Brokaw hasn't helped to clarify her
vision.
Posted: Thu - February 19, 2004 at 08:03 PM
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Published On: Mar 15, 2005 03:21 PM
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