Angels in America
The HBO production of Angels in
America
 Emma
Thompson as the AngelI
watched part one of the HBO special Angels in America
last week, and part two tonight. This is a fairly faithful adaptation of Tony Kushner's
play. It is a terrific play, and has been adapted sucessfully in a first rate
production. Here's part of the pr blurb found at the Barclay Agency, which
represents him for speaking
tours:Tony Kushner’s
seven-hour, two-part, Broadway production of
Angels in America: A Gay
Fantasia on National Themes is
a masterful epic—it has received a Pulitzer Prize, two Tony Awards, two
Drama Desk Awards, the Evening Standard Award, two Olivier Award Nominations,
the New York Critics Circle Award, the Los Angeles Drama Critics Circle Award,
and the LAMBDA Literary Award for Drama. In 1998, London’s National
Theatre selected Angels in
America as one of the ten best
plays of the 20th century. About
Angels in
America, Newsweek magazine wrote,
“The entire work is the broadest, deepest, most searching American play of
our time.” The 2003 HBO television version of this play was directed by
Mike Nichols and featured actors Al Pacino, Meryl Streep, and Emma Thompson.
I saw part one on stage
twice, once on Broadway, and
once in Washington, DC. I saw part two once, in London at the National
Theatre.Although I think that
this is the best American play in the last twenty years, and although the acting
is superb, I still feel that the television version does not have the power of
the stage version. Partly that is because the play is so theatrical, it feel
diminished a bit on the small screen. Some characters that are fabulously larger
than life on the stage - Roy Cohn and Belize - are not quite as exciting on
television. That said, it is a very moving, funny and sad, tragic but ultimately
hopeful play. I really like that Kushner has not played to stereotypes, and that
the message is all about forgiveness and
understanding.He does not sugar
coat things either - both Joe and Louis get forgiven, but they have blown it
with Prior Walter and Harper. This feels
right.There were a number of fine
performances, including Al Pacino as Roy Cohn, Mary Louise Parker as Harper,
Jeffrey Wright
playing Belize (as he did on Broadway), and Meryl Streep as Hannah Pitt. Pacino,
I saw last summer in Salome , and
Parker I saw several years ago in Proof - Wright
I saw as Belize in the original. The others I do not think I have ever seen on
stage.The most successful parts
were the realistic ones - the scenes in heaven don't really work properly on tv,
although Emma Thompson's Angel is really great. It reminds of just how good this
play is, and I am going to add it to next semester's drama lit
course.
Posted: Mon - December
15, 2003 at 12:24 AM
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Published On: Mar 15, 2005 03:21 PM
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