Share your thoughts on End Days
by Chelsea Keenan on 11/11/2009 02:35:00 PM
End Days probes big questions of faith and hope. We've heard lots of interesting feedback already, and now we hope you'll add your thoughts to the conversation.
 "...a lighthearted, fresh look into the ideas that make up evangelical religion, physics, the Rapture, and belief in general." (Edge Chicago)"Absolutely fantastic!!! A definite MUST see. We thoroughly enjoyed this and definitely recommend." (Scott S. via goldstarevents.com)" Laufer's characters are written too cartoonishly to truly connect; all we hear is the author's voice." (TimeOut Chicago)"...exceedingly smart, goofily apocalyptic tragicomedy ...provides plenty of food for thought and an array of bittersweet side dishes." (Sun-Times)
Leave us your full review a la the critics, a response to another write-up or just a thumbs up/down; we want to hear what you think!
Labels: Critics, End Days
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I really was disappointed with the production given the ticket price and the reputation of Next. The set was lovely but impractical and forced me to miss several moments happening USL (pivitol visual moments). I was disappointed with the lack of depth of the characters and the relationships which only seemed to develop in the second act. I enjoyed the script and hope to see more plays at Next, which I can expect to be held to a higher caliber.
It was fantastic!
Joe Wycoff as Stephen Hawking is worth the price of admission alone.
The play was performed beautifully by the cast but I thought it needed tightening since my attention was not captured continuoulsy as it became repetitive. The concept was very good and many one-liners earned well deserved laughter. The meta message of family cohesion could have been delivered without as much time waiting for the Rapture.
It was wonderful! Joe Wycoff as Stephen Hawking was outstanding! I like the way the spiritual and scientific "faith" was presented. It was interesting watching through the play how "Elvis" was really more of a savior than "Jesus" was. Great play! The cast was great!
The show was wonderful. I am so glad that no one was attempting a New York accent. Sometimes I just sit through a bad performance because I have a theater major at NYU and I hope people will do the same for her. I never looked at my watch or even thought of leaving. The play was delightful!
We thought the show was wonderful! Loved the script, loved the set, and each of the actors was top notch. Would see it again and have recommended to our friends. Thank you for a wonderful evening.
The first half put it among the very best plays I have seen in the past 5 years, with Jesus and Steven Hawking -- both played fantastically by Joe Wycoff -- keeping things lively. The second half was good, but not at the really high level of the first.
I thought this play exposed some timely and sensitive issues about family, fear, science and religion that could get a good conversation started. The cast was particularly good in presenting their individual dilemmas with a combination of seriousness, charm and humor. Another interesting production from the NEXT that held my attention throughout.
We took advantage of an industry comp to see this play. Wow! What a treat..it took us back to the olden days of storefront Chicago theatre. (Yes, Evanston and Chicago share an umbilical cord..Sheridan Road and a Gestalt) We loved it so much we immediately signed up for the rest of the season and I'm sure we'll continue. You can tell the actors love this home..it really shows. Andy Atlass
I saw the first reading and thought the second act needed tightening. I thought it still needed it in the final production, but my friend thought it was fine. I very much like the wacky conceit of the plot and the fact that the evangelical character was not depicted as a nutcase. The message I took from it was that much of science is as much a matter of belief as religious belief. I find that food for thought.
Based on the grim title, I was expecting a heavy storyline. Next Theater instead surprised me with loads of comic moments and an uplifting experience overall. Playwright Deborah Zoe Laufer bravely tackles the fear Americans have wrestled with since 9/11 (but which many felt long before that), then shows ways to beat it. The cast and directing are terrific, but the fine script deserves the greatest accolades. Together they make us laugh at the quirky characters but also love and empathize with them. I did feel the opening segements could be tweaked, in that it took me a little too long to get oriented to the characters and the story. That's a minor criticism of a very significant theatrical achievement. "End Days" grapples with modern American angst and defuses it. Provocative and entertaining.
We thought it was a splendid production. Laura Fisher was splendid, Joeseph Wycoff was perfect, and the young Adam Shalzi was charming--definitely the crazy glue that held the whole thing together. We weren't completely sold on the set, but thought Muray's direction was excellent. Bravo! Light years ahead of Boom!
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