Director May Adrales’ staging fully mines the play’s emotional richness. Performing on Mimi Lien’s abstract set featuring large sculptural formations gorgeously lit by Jiyoun Chang, the actors deliver stirring turns, while Huang Ruo’s Eastern-inflected score strikes all the right notes.
Director May Adrales’ staging fully mines the play’s emotional richness. Performing on Mimi Lien’s abstract set featuring large sculptural formations gorgeously lit by Jiyoun Chang, the actors deliver stirring turns, while Huang Ruo’s Eastern-inflected score strikes all the right notes.
Director May Adrales’ staging fully mines the play’s emotional richness. Performing on Mimi Lien’s abstract set featuring large sculptural formations gorgeously lit by Jiyoun Chang, the actors deliver stirring turns, while Huang Ruo’s Eastern-inflected score strikes all the right notes.
Director May Adrales’ staging fully mines the play’s emotional richness. Performing on Mimi Lien’s abstract set featuring large sculptural formations gorgeously lit by Jiyoun Chang, the actors deliver stirring turns, while Huang Ruo’s Eastern-inflected score strikes all the right notes.
Director May Adrales’ staging fully mines the play’s emotional richness. Performing on Mimi Lien’s abstract set featuring large sculptural formations gorgeously lit by Jiyoun Chang, the actors deliver stirring turns, while Huang Ruo’s Eastern-inflected score strikes all the right notes.
May Adrales intelligently directs, emphasizing the themes of ethnic isolation and the struggling emergence of Asian-American identity. If the first production of Dance and the Railroad brought attention to Hwang as an original voice in American theater, this revival points up how much he has increased our consciousness of Asian Americans and their not-so-easy assimilation into American culture.
A graceful, extended climax (sensitively directed by May Adrales), in which the men collaborate on an “opera” of Ma’s terrible journey to the West, deepens the piece immeasurably.
May Adrales’s elegant, spare, beautifully visualized production gives Hwang’s cunningly economical play a poetic feel, without scanting its underlying anguish. Both actors do well; their silences do a lot of the talking. Wu’s intense impassivity as he rehearses his stylized motions is particularly riveting.”