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adding machine

Darkly comic and heartbreakingly beautiful, Adding Machine, a musical adaptation of Elmer Rice's incendiary 1923 play, tells the story of Mr. Zero, who after 25 years of service to his company is replaced by a mechanical adding machine. In a vengeful rage, he murders his boss. An eclectic score gives passionate and memorable voice to this stylish and stylized production, which follows Zero's journey to the afterlife in the Elysian Fields where he is met with one last chance for romance and redemption.

Music by Joshua Schmidt
Book & Lyrics by Jason Loewith & Joshua Schmidt
Director David Cromer

 

Cast:

Cyrilla Baer, Joel Hatch, Amy Warren, Joe Farrell, Jeff Still, Adinah Alexander, Niffer Clarke, Roger E. DeWitt, Daniel Marcus.

 

Set design by Takeshi Kata
Lighting design by Keith Parham
Sound design by Tony Smolenski IV
Costume design by Kristine Knanishu

Video design by Peter Flaherty

Properties design by Michele Spadaro.

 

Website

Review

Ticketing and Show Information

Category Off Broadway Musical
Presenter Two Step Productions
Previews Feb 7, 2008
Opening Feb 25, 2008
Closing Closed July 20, 2008
Schedule Tues - Fri at 8pm / Sat at 3pm and 8pm / Sun at 3pm
Theatre Minetta Lane Theatre
Location

18 Minetta Lane  (Bleecker and West 3rd St)

Price $65.00
Box Office (212) 420 - 8000
Phone TicketMaster (212) 307 - 4100
Online http://www.ticketmaster.com/
Accessible seating available at the Box Office only. Space is limited. No elevators or escalators. Call (212) 477-2477 for more information.

Restrooms are located on the same level as the theatre.
The building entrance is street level.
Air Conditioned

Subway A, C, E, B, D, F, V  to West 4th St, one block south of West 3rd just off 6th Ave.
Bus M3, M5 or M10

Review

Adding Machine

Minetta Lane Theatre

March 6, 2008

Morgan Wycks

mwycks@nyconstage.org

 

 

Taking Elmer Rice’s The Adding Machine, composer Joshua Schmidt and co-librettist Jason Loewith have created an avant-garde operetta entitled simply Adding Machine. In doing so they successfully re-evaluate the play giving it a depth it lost over time and in essence became a period piece. The story concerns a man who spent 25 years of life in slavery to said title, who then gets laid off right before retirement, kills his wife in a rage of frustration, falls for his assistant who has carried a torch for him for years and ends up on death row. Rice’s bleak Kafka-esque play using archetypes to decry the demoralization of the common man was of its time but this new rendition gives it emotional weight with its music and substantive performances.

 

Incredibly realized by director David Cromer, every element of the production comes close to being flawless. The simple sets of Takeshi Kata possess grim and nightmarish qualities especially when darkly lighted by Keith Parham. In fact, Mr. Parham should be commended for how he uses the absence of light to portray repression and anger. Then on the flip side when the characters end up in “a pleasant place”, Messrs. Kata and Parham create a picture post card - a valentine circa 1919. The contrast is almost magical. The costumes of Kristine Knanishu and the sound design of Tony Smolenski IV perfectly compliment the look and sound of the era as well.

 

The three principal performers bring flesh and blood to the characters that could have easily been cartoons. Messrs. Schmidt and Loewith give Mrs. Zero an atonal staccato sound that pierces, nags and pesters and in the role Cyrilla Baer tempers this harpy with humor and pitiful incomprehension. As the love interest, Daisy, who almost escapes Mr. Zero’s attention, Amy Warren fills each moment in her acting and each phrase in her singing with heartache and yearning. Her vocal control is a marvel to hear. And as Mr. Zero, the towering Joel Hatch brings such a hard edge to the performance that when his vulnerability cracks through, one almost must look away. If anything in the production doesn’t work it‘s the character of Schrdlu, a character bizarre and difficult and placed here by Mr. Rice for a reason that is almost moot. Unfortunately, he is played without insight by Joe Farrell and he comes off as merely weird

.

Despite the ingenuity of everyone involved and the appreciation one has for the results, the odd thing about Adding Machine is this – it’s not particularly enjoyable. It’s like sitting through therapy – something that, though painful, is ultimately beneficial and good for you, and in the end you can’t wait to get out of there.

 

...end